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PHILIPPINES POLITICAL

ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT


An assessment of the political economy factors that shape
the prioritisation and allocation of resources for essential
health services for women and children
Ian Anderson and David Hipgrave
February 2015

unite for
children
PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT
PHILIPPINES POLITICAL
ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT
An assessment of the political economy factors that shape
the prioritisation and allocation of resources for essential
health services for women and children.

Ian Anderson and David Hipgrave


February 2015
Acknowledgements Contents
Special thanks go to Drs Willibald Zeck and Raoul Bermejo III in the UNICEF office, Manila Acknowledgements
for their assistance in the conduct of the field work and preparation of this report.
Acronyms
Currencies and exchange rates

1 Executive Summary
2. Background
2.1 Background and purpose of this report
2.2 Methodology, frameworks used, and report structure

3. The RMNCH situation of the Philippines


3.1 RMNCH achievements and ongoing challenges
3.2 Political, economic and development context
3.2.1 Where the Philippines is now: recent changes in the strategic landscape

4 Structure and function of the health sector and RMNCH at national and
sub-national levels, and related analysis
4.1 Health system structure, governance and stewardship
4.2 Health financing
4.3 Health and RMNCH priority-setting at national and sub-national levels
4.4 Procurement and logistics

5. Recommendations

References
Annex 1 Definitions of political economy
Annex 2 Approach and methodology
Annex 3 Inception Report for the Philippines
Annex 4 List of people interviewed in the Philippines
Annex 5 Strengths and weaknesses of the Philippines system of priority setting, planning and budgeting
Annex 6 Explanation of priority setting and planning by the National Economic and Development
Authority (NEDA) of the Philippines
Annex 7: Evidence based planning and budgeting in Davao City

Cover Picture
© UNICEF/NYHQ2012-1684/xxxxxxx
Acronyms 1 Executive summary
AHA Aquino Health Agenda Background and methodology The Philippines has a mixed record in terms of the health
AIP Annual Investment Plans sector, and RMNCH. On the one hand the under-five and
AOP Annual Operational Plans Decisions on the allocation of scarce resources are rarely infant mortality rates have fallen from 80 and 57 per 1000
barangays village made purely on the basis of technical criteria: political and live births respectively in 1990 to 30 and 22 per 1000 live
BuB Bottom up budgeting other factors also shape decision-makers’ choices. It is births in 2011. The Philippines is therefore likely to meet the
CIPH City-wide Investment Plan for Health therefore important to understand how and why governments fourth Millennium Development Goal (MDG) target on young
CPR Contraceptive Prevalence Rate in developing countries - as well as development partners child mortality. Universal Health Coverage (UHC) is being
Dependency ratio The ratio of people below 15 and above 65 years of age to the - prioritise and allocate their resources. Decisions that are scaled up rapidly, partly funded by a politically astute move
total population broadly compatible between technical criteria and political by the nation’s President to increase taxes on tobacco and
DBM Department of Budget and Management economy needs are then more likely to achieve outcomes alcohol and use the additional funds to expand UHC. On
DILG Department of Interior and Local Government that are financially, politically and institutionally sustainable, as the other hand, it appears that the maternal mortality ratio
DOH Department of Health well as equitable and of broad public benefit. (MMR) has worsened from 209 per 100,000 live births in
EBaP Evidence-based planning the early 1990s to around 221. Whether this is due to better
Gini coefficient A statistical estimate of inequality ranging from zero Since 2011, the Australian Government has been providing recording or deterioration in the situation is unclear. What is
(no inequality) to 1 (all wealth captured by one person). development assistance to improve reproductive, clear is that the Philippines is a long way from achieving the
LGUs Local Government Units maternal, newborn and child health (RRMNCH) outcomes MDG5 target on reducing maternal mortality. In a related
LPRAP Local Poverty Reduction Action Plans in Bangladesh, Indonesia, the Philippines and Nepal. The point, the contraceptive prevalence rate is still only around
MDGs Millennium Development Goals approach focuses on improved use of local data in the 50%, with little sign of improvement. Neonatal mortality is
NEDA National Economic Development Authority prioritisation, planning and allocation of resources at district 14 per 1000 live births with little progress. Inequity in access
NHA National Health Accounts level. The main objective has been to develop, through district- to and outcomes of essential health services also remains a
NHIP National Health Insurance Program level pilots, an ‘investment case’ to encourage sub-national major challenge. For example, around 94% of women with
PPP Public Private Partnership governments to fund RRMNCH as a key area of human a secondary education or higher use a skilled birth attendant
PPP Purchasing Power Parity development. Australian aid funding was channelled through (SBA) compared to only 26% of those with no education.
PhilHealth Philippines Health Insurance Corporation UNICEF and other partners working with governments at
RMNCH Reproductive, Maternal, Newborn and Child Health national and district level in each country. The political economy of the health
SAM Severe Acute Malnutrition (weight for height below –3 z scores sector and RMNCH
of the median WHO growth standard for age) To deepen its understanding of the political economy of health
SBA Skilled Birth Attendant and RRMNCH in those four countries, UNICEF undertook Recent announcements have given very clear and explicit
TFR Total Fertility Rate an analysis during July-September 2014. Field visits were political commitment to the social sector in the Philippines,
UHC Universal Health Coverage conducted in the Philippines over 14-26 July 2014. A mixed and are reflected in the 2013 national budget. The health
methodology was used, drawing on recommendations from sector has attracted a particularly rapid and sustained increase
academia and development experts. A questionnaire was in budgetary resources, albeit off a small base. Importantly,
developed based on a review of the relevant peer-reviewed the Department (or Ministry) of Health (DOH) also attracts
Currencies and exchange rates and grey literature. Local data was gathered and interviews an important share of total Government expenditure. The
100 Philippine Pesos (PHP) = $US 2.27 conducted in-country. This report provides the findings for the Administration is also achieving initial successes with a pro-
$US 1 = 44.1 Philippine Pesos (PHP) Philippines. poor conditional cash transfer scheme. However, despite
All $ are current United States dollars unless otherwise shown
budget increases, increased public expenditure is still needed,
Situation analysis especially to address the needs of the poor and vulnerable.

Much of the Philippine’s historically disappointing record Devolution of planning, resourcing, and service delivery
of development can be explained by five “P’s” of political has been a major consequence, and driver, of the political
economy: politics; political patronage; policies; population economy of RMNCH in the Philippines. The 1991 Philippines
and problems specific to the country. More specifically, Local Government Code involved sudden, major, devolution
a political system of “checks and balances”, means that of functions to subnational institutions, especially small
politically difficult but substantial reforms that affect poverty local government units (LGUs). It was an urgent exercise
and inequity levels can easily be blocked. Political patronage, to redistribute political and economic power in the final
occurring at national, regional and local levels, intertwined months of the Cory Aquino administration which feared a
with ‘money politics’ contributes to poor outcomes. Policy return to dictatorship in the coming elections. Devolution
distortions are a third factor explaining the poor record to date. involved major structural changes to personnel and budgets,
Population growth – itself a reflection of political economy especially at the DOH. However, in the years since 1991,
factors – has made the task of socio-economic development subnational priority setting (deciding what is important),
harder and more expensive. Problems particular to the planning (how implementation will take place, when and by
Philippines including conflict and natural disasters also explain whom), budgeting (determining the costs and sources of
its disappointing development progress. financial and other resources) and implementation, all key

PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT 7


The field visits undertaken during this analysis identified • Upstream planning and prioritising is important, but so
several issues. First, decentralisation and increased autonomy too is downstream implementation. Well-intentioned
for LGUs can benefit public health, but such autonomy can development partners often invest heavily in upstream
also lead to patronage. Decentralised autonomy has also had strategies and planning approaches, but those investments
unintended negative consequences, for example blocking of will not yield results if there is neglected capacity for
access to modern contraception. “Champions” were noted implementation, including procurement.
to be important advocates, but not always in the direction • Good data is more important than a new planning “tool”
intended. Development partners have their own political but the data must be appropriate. Many of the existing
economy incentives and can also skew planning and funding planning processes in the Philippines are “good enough”
priorities and outcomes, including during natural disasters. to generate sound public policy decisions. The Philippines
More generally, he likelihood that “evidence” will influence does not generally need new planning “tools”: what it does
local authorities’ priorities, plans and budgets depends on need is more accurate and timely data that can be fed into
‘what evidence’, ‘whose evidence’, ‘when does it arrive’ existing planning processes. Having good data from well-
and ‘how is it presented’. Evidence-based planning (EBaP) conducted impact and program evaluations is a particularly
and allocation of funds, a focus of UNICEF since 2012, are valuable but often neglected investment.
irrelevant if implementation and procurement are ill-suited to • Increases in the funding of health benefits covered by
increased resources. As with much of South East Asia, the PhilHealth will potentially have a major influence on nation-
for-profit private sector – whether qualified or not – is a major wide access to health care benefits for the poor, including
source of health service delivery, especially for the poor. women and their children. There is an opportunity for
Yet the coverage and quality of the private sector is often development partners to work closely to further influence
overlooked in planning and prioritising new investments in the this in the interests of pro-poor outcomes.
health sector. • Mayors are particularly powerful in the Philippines, but
medium and longer term health issues may not align with
There are other related challenges. The capacity of smaller and their short terms of office. UNICEF support for capacity
resource-poor LGUs to prioritise, plan, budget and implement building for Mayors on the benefits of local investment
programs when they have hitherto managed small resources in pro-poor health outcomes, particularly RMNCH, is
is a key bottleneck to effective, efficient and equitable health important. Related workshops for the media, politicians and
service provision. A recent Public Expenditure Review civil society can also be effective in raising the priority of
concluded that the distribution of revenues, expenditures health issues. Well informed media coverage is a key factor
and some key development outcomes across regions in in shaping public opinion.
the Philippines is becoming more unequal. There is inequity • The National Health Accounts (NHAs) of a country are a
in financing between, and within, provinces. The ability of strategic but often under-utilised source of evidence for
national agencies to influence subnational outcomes is mixed policy dialogue. Well-done accounts can provide a clear
as devolution disperses political and economic power. For and easily accessible overview of the entire health system
example, procurement and logistics are challenges under including sources and uses of funds by public and private
decentralisation, due to issues of quality of commodities and sectors. Interviews confirmed that the evidence contained
corruption. in NHAs are rarely used by public health advocates in the
Philippines or most development partners. This is a lost
The Philippines provides two particularly rich political economy opportunity for engaging in more evidence-based policy
to achieving government objectives, have been weak and now as important as the DOH in determining health access case studies of reforms that have benefited the health of dialogue.
constrained by the five Ps. There are signs that LGUs are and outcomes, including for the poorest sectors of society. the poor: the Reproductive Health Bill and the “Sin Tax” on • Conditionality alone rarely works in social sector financing.
now gaining in professionalism and that accountability to Development partners accustomed to working solely through tobacco and alcohol that is used to fund UHC. In both cases, This partly because external concessional financing is now
national level, including in the health sector, is improving. For the DOH must now also engage with health insurers – and, at least at national level, major challenges raised by religious or a relatively small part of the total public health budget. What
example there are strengths in the newly revised processes in turn, private sector providers – as insurance coverage business interests were shrewdly overcome in the interests does make a difference is the provision of accurate, timely,
of priority setting, planning and budgeting, both at national expands. The Philippines government is determined to scale of public health. useful, usable insights into the “how” of reform.
and increasingly at sub-national levels. There is also evidence up coverage by the national insurer, PhilHealth, beyond • The unplanned and unexpected can completely overwhelm
that the current Philippines Administration wants to make the 82% of the population now covered, and to redesign Analysis and recommendations all planning: development partners need to be realistic
planning and budgeting more transparent and participatory. the benefit package. But the challenges should not be about how effective and durable planning processes are,
“Bottom-up budgeting” is an effort to systematically facilitate underestimated. Expenditure levels – and incentives to Several practical lessons were identified about current and and retain flexibility.
and institutionalise the local needs of poorer communities implement the benefit package – will change under UHC. future approaches for UNICEF and other development
into planning and resource allocation at the national level. A For example, curative treatment or end of life care in tertiary partners in the political economy context of the Philippines, In summary the Philippines is at an important stage in terms
scorecard system has also introduced an evidence-based, hospitals, or diagnostic tests by private doctors have a very as follow: of its political economy. It has a reforming President, a
systematic and easily used driver and monitor of health different cost and socio-economic impact than expenditure growing economy and an Administration committed to UHC.
planning and resource allocation and usage. on promotive and preventive health in primary and secondary • Development partners must understand Philippines There are opportunities for development partners to assist
care settings. Developments at PhilHealth provide a major politics, but at the same time stay distant from it. The the health system so that it increasingly benefits the poor,
Another major indicator of the Philippines government opportunity for international agencies to influence major worst outcome would be for a bilateral, United Nations including women and their children, using data, advocacy and
commitment to the health sector is its scaling up of UHC. decisions on health financing at the national level. or multilateral agency to have its evidence captured by a existing lines of influence.
In the Philippines health insurance institutions are arguably political process or be seen to be partisan.

8 PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT 9
2. Background
2.1 Background and purpose remains a large but preventable RMNCH burden globally,
including in Asia and the Pacific: 2.5 million children under
of this report five died in this region in 2013, 41% of the global burden
(14). Understanding the political economy of RMNCH is
Social and economic development processes involve also important because proven, affordable, interventions
much more than technocratic approaches: ‘political that dramatically improve RMNCH outcomes have been
economy’1 factors usually determine the fate of successfully implemented at scale in some low income
reforms. This finding is clear from the international Asian countries decades ago (15). Yet if the scientific
literature (1-12). More specifically, how - and why - evidence base, cost-effectiveness and affordability for
governments make and implement decisions; prioritise improving RMNCH have been so clear, for so long, why
the allocation of scarce financial and human resources; have so many countries failed to invest accordingly? Why,
resolve trade-offs; regulate the private sector; achieve despite the political commitments and rhetoric, do several
accountability; and interact with civil society and countries in Asia have the lowest absolute and relative
development partners is an essential key to understanding levels of government expenditure going to health, and
the process of international development. Understanding especially RMNCH? How can RMNCH be prioritised and
how governments use – or don’t use – evidence to resourced in countries which are rapidly decentralising
shape policies and prioritise the use of their own scarce political and economic decision making to sub-national
resources is also increasingly important. That is particularly districts and even to villages? Political economy analysis
true as more and more countries achieve middle income can help provide insights into these issues for the benefit
status2, albeit with large burdens of poverty (13) and aid of governments and their development partners.
programs become progressively smaller.
This report builds on recent collaborative work
Development partners need to increasingly between Australia and UNICEF aimed at improving the
understand the political economy of decision making evidence base for investment decisions for RMNCH
and resource allocation if they are to have impact. in Asia. More specifically, the Australian Government’s
Traditional forms of Overseas Development Assistance aid program3 funded an initiative –the Investment Case
(ODA) have become relatively less important in much of Approach - in Bangladesh, Indonesia, Philippines and
Asia as those economies expand and some development Nepal since June 2011. Led by UNICEF and its partners,
partners withdraw. For example, total ODA in all sectors the goal was to demonstrate a new and systematic
now constitutes less than one per cent of government way of producing evidence that enables policymakers
expenditure in Indonesia. While ODA can be helpful and and planners to: 1) assess the extent to which RMNCH
catalytic in supporting reforms, the key to improved services are equitably distributed, using locally gathered
outcomes will be how countries prioritise and use their data; 2) identify the constraints hampering the scale-up
own resources. The ‘country-driven development’ vision of cost-effective interventions that affect RMNCH; 3)
of the Paris Declaration and Accra Agenda for Action design realistic strategies to address those constraints
further point unmistakably to the importance of national and 4) estimate the expected mortality and morbidity
planning and budgeting, however uncomfortable that may impact and costs associated with implementing the
be for development partners increasingly seeking visibility, strategies proposed. The approach sought to influence
‘quick wins’ and avoidance of corruption from their own national policymakers and other stakeholders, including
aid dollar. Development partners have their own political development partners, by highlighting financing gaps
economy incentives and drivers. Those partners wishing within national health systems and in specific geographic
to support more evidence-based priorities and resource areas, as well as gaps in governance of the health sector.
allocation decisions by developing country governments But the approach also focuses on improving the evidence
must identify more sophisticated – but legitimate – entry base for sub-national planning and budgeting. That is
points of influence. because some of the greatest RMNCH needs occur in
geographically and economically disadvantaged areas, UNICEF commissioned this report to better increase their impact on RMNCH and the health sector
Understanding the political economy of Reproductive, where the evidence and capacity for good decision making understand the political economy of decision making more broadly. Similar reports are being prepared for three
Maternal, Newborn and Child Health (RMNCH) is a is weakest. in the Philippines, with particular reference to RMNCH. other countries – Bangladesh, Indonesia, and Nepal –
particularly important issue. That is partly because there This report responds to UNICEF’s and DFAT’s wish to where UNICEF and DFAT have been supporting evidence-
better understand the overarching strategic factors that based planning in support of women and their children.
drive priority setting and resource allocations for RMNCH The original Terms of Reference for this report are available
1
Some useful definitions of ‘political economy’ as they apply to international development are set out in Annex One. and the health sector more broadly at both the national on request. The political economy reports are in addition to
2
The World Bank classifies countries as “middle income” if they had a GNI per capita of more than $1045 but less than $12,746 in 2013. Within and sub-national levels in the Philippines. This can, in a quite separate exercise that evaluates the outputs and
the middle income category, those countries with a GNI per capita of less than $4125 are classified as lower middle income, while those
turn, then inform UNICEF and other stakeholders how outcomes of the Investment Case approach.
above are classified as upper middle income.
3
Originally AusAID and from 2013 the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT). they might need to recalibrate their approaches so as to

10 PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT 11
2.2 Methodology, frameworks July – September 2014. Interviews in the Philippines
occurred over the period 14-26 July in Manila as well
3. The RMNCH situation of the Philippines
used, and report structure as a field visit to Davao to interview stakeholders in the
UNICEF-supported evidence-based planning program.
There are numerous analytical tools and approaches In total 28 stakeholders from government, civil society
3.1 RMNCH achievements probability to achieve the MDG 4 target on reducing child
and infant mortality by two thirds between 1990 and 2015
that could be drawn on to examine the political (research and academic institutions) and development and ongoing challenges (22). That report further states that the Philippines also has
economy of health and RMNCH in developing partners were interviewed (Annex 4). It is worth a “high” probability to provide universal access to primary
countries, as they are reflected in priority setting, mentioning that more than two thirds of those senior The Philippines has made strong and steady progress education; provide educational opportunities for girls;
planning and budgeting by Governments. These interviewees were female: a welcome reflection of the – at least at a national level – in reducing child and reverse the incidence of malaria; increase tuberculosis
include a “how to note” on political economy analysis women’s status in positions of authority in the Philippines. infant mortality. As seen in Chart 1 below, the latest detection and cure rates; and increase the proportion of
by the UK Department for International Development Unfortunately, requests for interviews with the national Government report (21) states that under-five mortality households with access to safe water supply. The MDG
(DFID) (16) and the World Bank (17); the approach by Department of Health, Department of Budget and rate at the national level fell from 80/1000 live births in target of halving the proportion of people with no access
the Overseas Development Institute (18); and the Management, and the Australian Department of Foreign 1990 to 30/1000 live births in 2011 (the latest year available to basic sanitation has already been achieved. Each of
World Bank’s “problem driven governance” framework Affairs and Trade in Manila could not be accommodated in this series). The infant mortality rate has fallen from these developments is valuable and worthwhile in their
presented by Fritz et al. (19). There are also numerous in the time available. The lead analyst (Ian Anderson) was 57/1000 to 22/1000 over the same period. The neonatal own right. Each will also contribute directly or indirectly to
tools and approaches that can be applied to political accompanied and actively supported in all interviews by Dr mortality rate was 14/1000 in 2012. That Government improved health for women and children.
economy analysis including “Theory of Change”; “Drivers Raoul Bermejo III, Health Specialist, UNICEF Philippines. report further states that the Philippines has a “high”
of Change” “Most Significant Change”. All of these tools The questionnaire used as the basis for interviews is
and approaches have something to offer, but because available on request. Conceptualisation, oversight of the
there is great variety between, and within, the four design and implementation of the work was provided by
countries captured in this study, we have not adhered to the second author of this report (David Hipgrave). Chart 1. Progress on under-five, infant, and neonatal mortality in the Philippines
one in particular. Indeed, it would be remarkable if any
one analytical approach could be applied coherently and The country level visits and interviews involved a 100
comprehensively to all four countries, especially given mixed method approach. This involved:
the focus of the work on sub-national level, which has a. Discussions with local staff on the findings of the desk 90
not been analysed very widely, especially in Asia (20). review and exploring its implications for their local 80
However, this analysis of the political economy of RMNCH activities in health and other sectors. 80
in the Philippines and the other three countries drew on b. Interviewing wherever possible experts from
the methodological framework employed by DFID’s “How government in the finance, planning, health and other 70
to” note, and Fritz’s “problem driven governance”, as they social sectors.
were most applicable to the social sectors. A definition of c. Discussions with the major development partners and 60
57
political economy is at Annex 1. Further details, including academics who have previously assessed the political 54.2

a schematic overview of the approaches used by DFID, as economy of social sector issues 50 48.4

well as Fritz et al, are in Annex 2. d. Gathering and analysing quantitative data on social
40
sector spending, disbursement and sub-sectoral 40
The specific methodology used for each of the four allocations (infrastructure, human resources, advocacy 33.6 35.1
34
32
countries was as follows. The lead author first reviewed /communications), as well as local analysis on related 29
30
30
different approaches to political economy analysis, policy direction 24 25
22
especially as it applies to the health and social sectors, in
20
peer-reviewed and/or grey literature. He then searched the This report is structured as follows. Section 3 provides 17.7 17.8 17 13
peer-reviewed and grey literature and open access data a summary and analysis of the RMNCH situation and 16 14
10
bases to identify the main political economy characteristics development context of the Philippines. Section 4
of each country’s health and development sectors. The summarises the structure and function of the health
literature review and data base analyses were then used to sector and RMNCH at the national and sub-national level, 0
1990 1993 1998 2003 2006 2008 2011 2015
develop an inception report summarising the key political and provides an appraisal of its performance. Section 5
Infant Mortalitiy Under Five Mortality Neonatal Mortality
economy characteristics and RMNCH status of each provides recommendations based on the foregoing.
country. The Inception Report also set out the proposed
methodology and analytical approach, including ethical
Source: Government of the Philippines / UNDP (2014)
issues; a proposed standard questionnaire for interviews,
and a recommended program of field level interviews,
decided in collaboration with the UNICEF Country Office.
The Inception Report for the Philippines is available at
Annex 3.

Once UNICEF had reviewed and approved the


Inception Reports and methodology, field level
interviews were conducted involving one or two week
visits to each of the four countries over 7 weeks during

12 PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT 13
60. Moreover, the Philippines still has one of the h
countries in the region, with a Gini coefficient of around
However there has been little progress – and even quarters and so reach the Philippines’ MDG 5 MMR 3.2 Political, countries
economic in and
the region ineither started
the region have had higherfrom lower
initial rates of poverty, Gini leve
reversal – in terms of maternal health and modern target of 52/100,000. Similarly, the Philippines has a poor they have been able to reduce poverty rates faster than
family planning. The Philippines has a Total Fertility record in terms of increasing coverage of modern family development income context growth (e.g., Cambodia, Vietnam),
the Philippines. This is apparent fromor managed
Chart 3 below. to lo
Rate (TFR) of 3.1 per woman (23). The latest Government planning (MDG target 5b). Government reports state that The latest Government report states that the incidence
report (21) confirms that the maternal mortality ratio the Contraceptive Prevalence Rate (CPR) was essentially Malaysia,
Despite its potential, Thailand)
the Philippines has had a (Figure 3.3).
of poverty The from
has reduced country’s high inlevel of
over one third (34.4%)
(MMR) was an estimated 209/100,000 live births in 1990, “stagnant” at around 50% of currently married women4 disappointing record of economic growth and 1991 to just over one quarter (25.2%) in 2012 (21). While
falling to 162/100,000 by 2006. However the 2014 Family between 1998 and 2006, and may have slipped further to high
social development sinceratio of Filipino
Independence in 1946. billionaires’ netisworth
welcome, this reduction totheGDP,
still well above 17.2% which
Health Survey report estimated the MMR at 221/100,000: just less than half (48.9%) by 2011 (21). Uptake of safe and The Philippines has had, on average, lower economic poverty rate that would have enabled the Philippines
higher even than the starting point in 1990. Measuring effective modern family planning is disproportionately low growth, lower income countries
poverty reduction, in the region
and higher inequity (Table
to reach the MDG 1 target3.1).
on reducing poverty by half
MMR is difficult, so such variations are not particularly among the poor. A 2014 UNFPA report (23) cites evidence than comparable countries in the region or at its level between 1990 and 2015.
surprising. Indeed, the apparent increase may reflect from 2007 that unplanned and unwanted births are higher of income over the decades (26). While other countries
better statistical reporting rather than an actual increase. among the poor in the Philippines than the average in
Whatever the explanation, it is clear that the Philippines 41 comparable countries, and significantly higher than in Figure 3.1 Poverty reduction is slowest in
Chart 3. Slower rate of reducing poverty in the Philippines than comparable countries. Figure 3.2 …
will not be able to reduce maternal deaths by three neighbouring Indonesia (Chart 2).
the Philippines … Indonesia,
Chart 2. Unplanned / unwanted pregnancies in the Philippines, Indonesia and 39 other countries
Poverty headcount ratio Ave
100 at USD 1.25 a day as pe
at
Philippines 80 15

Percent of population
2
Unwanted births per woman

12
60

Percent
9
40 6
Average
1
41 countries
20 3
Indonesia 0
0

0
1 2 3 4 5 Philippines Cambodia
Wealth quintile. poorest (1) to richest (5) China Indonesia
Lao PDR Malaysia
Thailand EAP (developing only)
Source: UNFPA (2014)
Source: WDI Source: WDI
Inequity remains a major challenge in the Philippines. inequalities occur in terms of access to and use of skilled Note: EAP stands for East Asia and Pacific countries. Some Note: Some co
The World Bank estimates that the Gini Index of birth attendants (SBA) in the Philippines across a range of
countries have missing values during certain years. years.
inequality5 for the Philippines is 43.0 (24). While not as high socio-economic criteria: education, income, or geography.
as Colombia (Gini coefficient of 53.5) and several other Latin More specifically, latest WHO statistics (25) show that
American countries, the Philippines has a higher inequality 73% of women with a secondary education or higher, 94%
Source: World Bank (26)
score than Indonesia (Gini coefficient 38.1) and many of the women in the highest wealth quintile and 78% of
other countries in Asia. Even more worrying is the fact that women in urban areas use a SBA, compared to only 11%
income inequality has remained virtually the same for more of those with no education; 26% of those in the lowest
Political economy factors explain much of the Politics is one factor explaining the poor record to
than 20 of the last years in the Philippines. Using slightly quintile and 48% of those in rural areas. Interestingly, there
disappointing record of economic growth and poverty date. The Philippines is a democratic republic with a
different data sets and approaches the latest Government of are significant inequalities in the contraceptive prevalence
reduction. The Philippines has been subject to some particularly vibrant and free press. However it also has
Philippines reports (21) state that the Gini index of inequality rate based on education – women with secondary or higher
particularly severe natural disasters including typhoons, several political characteristics that have impeded broad
in the Philippines was 0.47 in 2012, barely different from the levels of education are four times more likely to use modern
earthquakes and volcanoes over the decades. Indeed, based socio-economic growth. As a former colony of
estimate of 0.48 of 1991. There are significant inequalities in contraception than those with no education – but there is
the Philippines is ranked as the third most disaster prone the USA, the Philippines inherited the US system of
the use of important health services. For example significant virtually no rural/urban difference (25).
country in the world
54 after Tonga and Vanuatu, based on checks and balances between legislature (Congress),
Problems with the household surveys, such as high rate of non-respon
the number of events (21). Nevertheless, much of the Executive (the President and the administration) and
4
It could be assumed that the CPR among women who are not married, including adolescents, is higher. could actually be higher in the Philippines. If the imputed income of the
explanation for the Philippine’s disappointing record can
be explained by five “P’s” of political economy: politics;
an independent judiciary. In principle, this should have
prevented concentration of power in the hands of one
5
The Gini coefficient estimates the extent of inequality of income and wealth in a country. More formally, the World Bank states that the “Gini
index measures the extent to which the distribution of income or consumption expenditure among individuals or households within an household survey, the Gini coefficient increases by 2.8 points.
political patronage; policies; population, and problems arm of Government. However, the longstanding Marcos
economy deviates from a perfectly equal distribution”. A score of one means one individual hypothetically owns all the wealth in the country. specific to the Philippines. dictatorship, a period of martial law, corruption and
A score of zero means there is no inequality in the dispersal of income and wealth in the country.

14 PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT 15
“crony capitalism” favouring the elite proves that did not children, and quite strikingly, as a summary measure of emerged as the dominant sector of the economy…. Lack whose crude birth rate (25/1000 people) is 1.66 times
occur in practice. Political assassinations and numerous weak service delivery performance, a higher per centage of competition in key sectors, insecurity of property rights, that of other developing countries in east Asia and the
coup attempts over the decades have generated political of children are severely underweight” (32). Political complex regulations, and severe underinvestment by the Pacific. This reflects the influence of the Roman Catholic
instability. Experiences in the 1986 “EDSA revolution” patronage is also intertwined with “money politics”. government and the private sector has led to this growth church’s opposition to modern family planning, as well as
and afterwards means political leaders must ultimately be Another recent analysis concluded that: pattern, which is not the norm in the East Asia region. This national poverty levels. A rapidly increasing population puts
sensitive to the interests of the armed forces, and the ability The patronage nature of Philippine politics makes anomalous growth pattern has failed to provide good jobs additional demands on RMNCH services in the short term,
of the church to mobilise street protests, to stay in power. politicians’ reliance on money crucial to their political to the majority of Filipinos and has led to a substantial education facilities in the medium term, and job creation in
There continue to be allegations in the media that some survival. An important way to increase a politician’s outmigration of many of the country’s best and brightest the longer term. Moreover, the latest World Bank analysis
Mayors aligned to national party leaders get preferential chances of re-election is to influence public spending via a people. (26) suggests that structural factors in the Philippines have
access to resources. Political controversy can escalate politically targeted provision of public goods and services traditionally resulted in high levels of unemployment,
quickly and from unexpected quarters. For example, through the pork barrel (which includes the Priority Population growth – itself a reflection of political under-employment, and low productivity informal
opponents of President Aquino are now seeking his formal Development Assistance Fund … various congressional economy factors – has made the task of socio- employment (26). This means the Philippines could miss
impeachment over the reallocation of undisbursed funds allocations and congressional insertions). However, this economic growth harder and more expensive. The the opportunity of a “demographic dividend”7 and instead
from the well-intentioned and developmentally oriented is often not enough, given the perennially tight fiscal Philippines Commission on Population estimated that the face a “demographic burden”. High total fertility means
Disbursement Acceleration Program). situation of the Philippines…. As a result, politicians Philippines population reached 100 million on 26 July 2004, that the Philippines still has a high (albeit declining)
aspiring to remain in power must increase their chances almost 4 times larger than the population in 1960 (33). An dependency ratio8 of around 63% of the population: one of
The system of “checks and balances”, means that of re-election by other means, such as raising money estimated babies are born every day in the Philippines, the highest in the region (Chart 4).
politically difficult but substantial reforms that affect from outside the purview of the government. This very
poverty and inequity levels can be easily blocked. high reliance on money for political survival has often
This is particularly the case given weak party discipline resulted in the entrenchment of money politics and hence Chart 4: Philippines population growth and dependency ratios
and frequent powerful family dynasties in Congress. corruption in various government agencies…. In some
Lack of even modest agrarian reform in the Philippines agencies, rent-seeking, patronage, and politicization
- often blocked by landowning Congress members or of various functions of the government have become
their representatives – has substantial consequences for standard ways to raise money and to ensure the political Philippine dependency ratio is among the
Philippine population is still growing fast.
poverty and inequity in a country where most of the poor survival or advancement of many politicians. For the same highest in the region
are based in rural areas (27, 28). Congress, which approves reason, politicians are also very susceptible to vested Population and poppulation growth Age dependency ratio of selected East Asian countries
budget measures, has also been historically reluctant to interests when deciding on new laws. Even the most 100 4 80
raise income (and other) taxes in the Philippines, which reform-minded politician requires money, as his capacity to
has one of the lowest tax revenue ratios in the region, at govern and enact reform s crucially depends on how well 80
3.1
2.9
just 12% of GDP in 2012, virtually unchanged from 2001. he garners political support, which is often gained through 2.7 3 70
2.4 2.4
Congressional reluctance to raise taxes even during spurts money.(26) 60

Per cent

Per cent
Millions
of economic growth has the direct effect of reducing the 1.9
2 60
revenue (‘fiscal space’) that would otherwise be available Policy distortions are a third factor explaining the poor 40 92.3
76.5
to provide government services. Importantly, taxation is record to date. In any country, policies are essentially 60.7
not just a means of financing government services. It can a reflection of the interests/visions of the political elite, 20
48.1 1 50
also be shown that, globally and historically, low overall and political economy factors. In some cases, it is the 27.1
38.7

taxes weakens the demand by the governed for improved absence of good policies – including family planning
0 0 40
services and the overall accountability of government (1, and/or sustained programs to address under-nutrition in

00

10
0

01

03

05

07

09

11
9
6

9
20
19
19

19

19

20
29-31).

20
mothers and children – that helps to explain persistently

20
19

19

20

20

20

20
high levels of poverty in the Philippines.6 In other cases it Population Growth rate (rhs) Philippines Malasia
Indonesia Thailand
Political patronage, occurring at national, regional is the policies chosen. The World Bank latest Development
and local levels, intertwined with ‘money politics’ is Report for the Philippines summarises the historical
a second factor that explains poor development and situation as follows:
health outcomes. Political parties are generally weak in
Source: World Bank (2013) (26)
the Philippines. However, family political dynasties can The country’s long history of policy distortions slowed
be very strong and durable at the national (Marcos and the growth of agriculture and manufacturing in the last
Aquino families), regional (Osmena and other families) six decades. Instead of rising agricultural productivity
and local levels. Vote buying and political patronage is paving the way for the development of a vibrant labour-
common, often to the detriment of public policy or public intensive manufacturing sector and subsequently of a
health. A recent analysis on vote-buying in the Philippines high-skill services sector, the converse has taken place
found that: “In places where households report more in the Philippines. Agricultural productivity has remained
vote buying, government records show that municipalities depressed, manufacturing has failed to grow sustainably,
invest less in basic health services for mothers and and a low-productivity, low-skill services sector has

7
In essence, a “demographic dividend” occurs when a large youth bulge finds good well-paying jobs in the formal sector that then generates
income, taxes and wealth that can be invested by the country for longer term social benefit. A “demographic burden” occurs when that youth
6
Large numbers of unplanned children add to household costs among the poor, exacerbating household poverty. Under-nutrition in mothers, bulge is not able to be fully employed and so creates an additional burden on welfare and other services.
infants, and children directly increases the susceptibility to disease and indirectly reduces income earning potential, thereby 8
Those aged less than 15 years, and those aged older than 64 years (i.e. “dependents”) as a ratio of the total population. A higher per centage
exacerbating poverty. means more people are ‘dependent’ on the working age population to support them

16 PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT 17
Problems particular to the Philippines also explain • “Financial risk protection through expansion in
the disappointing record on socio-economic growth. National Health Insurance Program (NHIP) enrolment
The Philippines has had decades-long insurgencies and and benefit delivery - the poor are to be protected from
conflicts with the communist New Peoples’ Army in the financial impacts of health care use by improving the
several provinces, and Islamist separatists in parts of benefit: delivery ratio of the NHIP;
Mindanao. Poverty incidence is higher in conflict provinces • Improved access to quality hospitals and health care
(42%) than in non-conflict provinces (22%). Around 36% facilities – government owned and operated hospitals
of poor Filipinos, or 8.4 million, reside in conflict provinces and health facilities will be upgraded to expand capacity
(26). As noted earlier, the Philippines is particularly prone and provide quality services to help attain MDGs, attend
to natural disasters including typhoons, earthquakes and to traumatic injuries and other types of emergencies,
volcanoes. The widely dispersed, multiple island nature of and manage non-communicable diseases and their
the Philippines creates challenges and additional costs in complications; and
delivering basic social services. • Attainment of the health-related MDGs – public
health programs shall be focused on reducing maternal
These “five P’s” are particularly relevant to explaining and child mortality, morbidity and mortality from
relatively poor and inequitable RMNCH outcomes. TB and malaria, and the prevalence of HIV/AIDS, in
Low economic growth and tax collection has meant addition to being prepared for emerging disease trends,
limited fiscal space for investing in health and RMNCH, and prevention and control of non-communicable
particularly in the face of a growing population. Political diseases.”(36)
factors and policies have outlawed and/or financially
starved family planning programs. Political patronage and The Administration is achieving some important
lack of “voice” of the poor means what little has been successes, including keeping poor children healthy,
invested in health and RMNCH is often skewed in favour through a large scale conditional cash transfer
of the rich. Latest research from the World Bank (34) finds program. The program, known as 4P (Pantawid Pamilyang
that the Philippines is one of only 20 countries in the world Pilipino Program or Improving the Human Capital of the
(among 69 assessed) where government expenditure Poor) combines social welfare objectives in the form of
on health is “significantly pro-rich”. Problems specific to cash grants to poor households with social development
the Philippines often disproportionately affect women objectives (payment is conditional upon investing in the
and children: UNICEF reports that super typhoon Haiyan/ health of infants, children and adolescents). To be eligible,
Yolanda hit Tacloban and surrounding areas where 40% of households must meet the following conditions:
children were already living in poverty.
• Pregnant women must participate in pre- and post-natal
3.2.1 Where the Philippines is now: recent care and be attended during childbirth by a trained health
changes in the strategic landscape professional;
• Parents must attend Family Development Sessions ;
Recent policy pronouncements and allocation of • 0-5 year old children must receive regular preventive
resources to the social sectors imply a very explicit health check-ups and vaccines;
political commitment to the social sectors. The • 6-14 years old children must receive deworming pills
Constitution of the Philippines has enshrined funding twice a year.
for education as the first priority on budget resources • All child beneficiaries (0-18 years old) must enrol in
since 1986. However recent policy announcements have school and maintain a class attendance of at least 85%
also given a stronger commitment to health as well. per month
Public statements from President Aquino have been very
strong – and refreshingly direct and candid – suggesting a The program had 4,090,667 registered households as of
change in substance and style in favour of the majority of 25 June 2014 and operates in 79 provinces covering 1484
Filipinos. As just one example amongst many, President municipalities and 143 cities in all 17 regions nationwide
Aquino’s “Social Contract with the Filipino people” (37). An independent evaluation, partly funded by AusAID,
prominently pledges a change “From treating health as concluded that the program appears to be effective on a
just another area for political patronage to recognizing range of criteria, in terms of directing scarce resources
the advancement and protection of public health, which to the poor and vulnerable, helping to keep poor children
includes responsible parenthood, as key measures of good healthy, well nourished (a 10 per centage point reduction
governance.” (35) The Aquino Health Agenda (AHA) also in severe stunting compared to barangays that did not
seeks to put substance into the rhetoric by achieving UHC receive the program, where 24% of children aged 6-36
for all Filipinos. The three strategic thrusts of the Aquino months were severely stunted); enabling poor households
Health Agenda and UHC involve: to increase their investments in meeting the health and
education needs of their children; PhilHealth coverage
without impacting decisions to seek work or fertility rates.

18 PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT 19
4 Structure and function of the health sector and “Reliance on national resources is a pragmatic solution
to resource constraints, but it also raises questions
“While the DOH has been given the mandate for
stewardship and oversight of the health sector, it has not
RMNCH at national and sub-national levels, and of accountability and efficiency. The availability of been adequately empowered to enforce this mandate.

related analysis discretionary funding has commonly been politically


conditioned, potentially weakening LGUs’ accountability
For example, the stewardship of the DOH over LGUs is
loosely defined and the DOH cannot require LGUs and the
to their local constituencies. This also dampens LGUs’ private sector to submit health sector data. This creates
incentives to raise their own revenues, which again a huge challenge for the DOH to exercise its stewardship
4.1 Health system structure, Devolution also involved major structural changes
to personnel and budgets, especially at the DOH. requires a degree of accountability for the use of the function. Despite these limitations, the DOH has done a
governance and stewardship National level agencies lost staff and budgets to LGUs. revenues raised locally. Finally, opportunistic accessing of remarkable job in taking forward stewardship of the sector
More than 60% of DOH’s 74,896 staff, and more than national resources in the context of weak local planning especially vis-à-vis LGUs. The DOH has adopted innovative
The Philippines exhibits many characteristics common 60% of its nearly P10 billion budget, was devolved to can create problems of poor expenditure coordination and institutional mechanisms such as LGU scorecards,
to other South East Asian health systems. While there LGUs (39). This clearly created sudden, major, disruption reduced efficiency in resource allocation” (40). Centres for Health Development, and the Province Wide
are some first class facilities and personnel in the major to the planning and operation of health services at both Investment Plans to enhance LGU accountability for health
cities, the overall density of trained health workers is the national and decentralised levels. The situation was A recent Public Expenditure Review in the Philippines sector goals” (42).
low, especially in rural areas. Latest available figures further complicated by the fact that responsibility for concluded that the distribution of revenues,
expenditures and some key development outcomes
from WHO, which unfortunately relate to 2004, suggest several health services (immunization, communicable
across regions is becoming more unequal. More
4.2 Health financing
only 1.153 doctors, and 6 nurses / midwives, per 1000 disease control, provision of drugs and medicines to
population (38). Simultaneously however, many Filipino devolved facilities, and the operation of Manila hospitals) specifically, it concluded that:
The 2013 national budget reconfirms the government’s
doctors and nurses successfully migrate to the United was retained by the national DOH. commitment to the social sector. Social services
States and other OECD countries. As with many countries “Since 2000, per capita incomes, wage levels and poverty
– especially education but also health – were easily
in Asia, there is also a vibrant – if often poorly regulated The situation has become clearer over time, but there rates in the different regions have been evolving along
the largest component of the 2013 national budget in
– private sector, including pharmacies. In 2011 (latest remains major disparity in the financial, human resource, diverging paths. Only household expenditures exhibit
absolute and relative terms, being allocated 698 billion or
year available) private expenditure on health represented procurement and management capacity between and some modest convergence. Basic education and access
34.8% of the total budget. Economic services (physical
nearly two thirds (63%) of total health expenditure; 83% within the LGU health departments across the Philippines. to basic infrastructure indicators are also diverging across
infrastructure etc.) were next at P510 billion (25.5%). Debt
of private expenditure was directly out of pocket; and only This vertical and horizontal inequity of resources has regions. Health indicators that can be directly attributed
servicing was allocated P333 billion (16%). Defence was
11.7 % of that was in the form of private prepaid plans direct implications for the political economy of priority to the health sector, such as immunization rates, have
allocated just P89 billion (4.5%).
(25). External resources for health, including ODA, account setting, planning and resource allocation, and has a not been converging. The only case of clear and strong
for just 1% of total health expenditure. As with many potentially corrosive effect on accountability. Wealthier convergence can be found in infant and child mortality
The health sector has attracted a particularly rapid
countries in Asia, the Philippines is also investing political provinces and cities (many of which have large slums) rates (41)
and sustained increase in budgetary resources.
capital and financing into expanding UHC. with their own sources of tax revenue can fund activities This is clear from Chart 5 below. In essence, total DOH
that are only weakly aligned to national priorities and The political economy implications of this are clear.
expenditure was just P7.1 billion in 1991, and rarely
A key feature of the Philippines health system is DOH. They can ignore development partners. The financial Once again, a strong, centralised, authoritarian state
exceeded P10 billion for almost two decades, despite rapid
devolution: the 1991 Local Government Code involved incentives offered by development partners – and even would have more capacity to reallocate resources to
population growth in the Philippines. DOH expenditure
sudden, major, devolution of functions to subnational the DOH - are now so small compared to the budget of poorly performing sub-national provinces and districts than
increased to P18.9 billion in 2008 (under the Arroyo
units, especially small local government units. the big cities that it is hard to engage them. A World Bank a highly devolved state. But devolution, different resource
Administration)9 but increased even more from 2010
Devolution was an urgent and rapid political exercise study on service delivery found that “the most common endowments/economic opportunities between different
under the Aquino Administration, reaching P83.7 billion in
to distribute political and economic power in the final approach to mitigate the limitations in local resource provinces, seems to contribute to unequal access and
2014; it is projected to increase to P86.5 billion in 2015.
months of the Cory Aquino administration which feared a bases was to lobby the national government – either outcomes, at least in the short to medium term.
What is particularly noticeable is that the prime – almost
possible return to Marcos style dictatorship in the coming directly through national sectoral agencies or indirectly sole – driver of the increase is increased expenditure
elections. Most agency functions were devolved, although through the local congressmen – to allocate discretionary The ability of national level agencies to achieve
on maintenance and other operating expenses shown
the Department of Education successfully resisted national funds to finance devolved infrastructure and national outcomes is mixed. On the one hand, national
in the red line. This includes the very large amount the
this. Devolution was intended to create three broad services” (40). level agencies, including DOH, can be quite powerful.
Government is paying in health premiums for the poor
administrative levels for health services: a central DOH Interviews in Davao revealed that national agencies
under its scaling up of UHC. Also noticeable is the fact
in charge of regulation and tertiary care through hospitals Clearly, such ‘lobbying’ for resources occurs in all financed only 40% of all programs approved by the
that the allocation to salaries (green line) has remained
that it kept control over; provincial governments would societies, but it is not as rational, systematic, efficient regional NEDA office as meeting local priorities. When over
relatively flat over the last quarter of a century, raising
be responsible for provincial and district hospitals and or equitable as evidence-based priority setting and half (60%) of approved projects are unfunded, there would
concerns about out of pocket payments or reliance of
secondary care; and LGUs would be in charge of primary planning. Moreover, an environment that requires/ seem to be systematic inefficiency. Despite questioning,
providers on other sources of income.
care. Prior to decentralisation, LGUs were responsible facilitates extensive lobbying can have a corrosive the criteria upon which projects are eventually funded
for minor activities such as administration of garbage effect on local accountability. The same World Bank is not clear. On the other hand, the DOH has ongoing
collection. Decentralisation gave them significantly study also noted that LGUs with limited capacity to raise challenges with respect to national leadership of health.
expanded functions including principal responsibility “for local revenues lobbied central government for additional A recent World Bank review of the health sector in the
the delivery of basic services and the operation of facilities national resources. This is understandable. But additional Philippines concluded that:
in: (i) agricultural extension and research, (ii) social forestry, national resources allocated to poorer sub national units
(iii) environmental management and pollution control, often come with political strings attached. Local politicians
(iv) primary health and hospital care, (v) social welfare who focus too much on pleasing political patrons in
services, (v) repair and maintenance of infrastructure, (vi) Manila can also become less attuned to the needs of local
water supply and communal irrigation, and (vi) land use
9
It is unclear why the Arroyo administration increased health expenditure. All key stakeholders were asked during the field visits. Most were
communities. As the World Bank study said:
unaware/surprised that budget expenditure rose so quickly under that administration. The UNICEF office in Manila is continuing research on
planning.” (39) this question.

20 PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT 21
Chart 5. DOH expenditure. This chart needs to be interpreted with caution, as the quality or efficiency of public spending in explaining …
budget allocation going to health is a nationally retained performance gaps. In certain critical sectors, however,
program with little LGU counterpart financing, whereas the Philippines also exhibits shortfalls in the efficiency
100 national DOH expenditure on health is also supplemented of public spending, defined broadly as the performance
90 by counterpart financing by LGUs (although the total outcomes achieved per unit of public spending per annum.
quantum is difficult to estimate). An important factor contributing to a lower efficiency in
80
public spending are the disparities in the distribution of
70 Despite budget increases, increased public expenditure public expenditures, observed both across income groups
DOH expenditure is needed, especially to address the needs of the and across geographic regions. That is, public expenditures
60
program, billions of poor and vulnerable. The welcome increase in the DOH that are concentrated on fewer needy beneficiaries tend
Philippines pesos 50
budget allocation to P83.7 billion in 2014 needs to be put to generate weaker development impacts. These findings
(current) 40 in perspective, especially in a country like the Philippines suggest that the Philippines cannot hope to achieve
30 with its 100 million population. It averages only P830, or the same development outcomes as the better-
around $18.75 per person per year, much lower than the performing countries in the region through efficiency
20 (now dated) $34 suggested by the 2001 Commission on improvements alone, but will have to make a greater
10 Macroeconomics and Health as the minimum per capita effort in stepping up the quantity of public spending
0
public expenditure on health . It is also lower than the in priority areas. Improvements in the efficiency of public
updated estimate of $54 per person per year estimated spending can, of course, help in reducing the performance
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
by the high profile Taskforce on Innovative Financing in gaps, and this can be achieved by ensuring that the
Health (43), and less than a quarter of the $86 per capita benefits of public spending are distributed more equitably
Total Doh Maintenance and Other Operating Expenses Salaries Capital outlay that the recently released Chatham House report on health across regions and income group. (41)
financing recommended all governments in developing
countries should be spending on health (44). It is clear that the Philippines administration is
Source: Department of Budget and Management
determined to scale up UHC quickly, but the challenges
Improving the quality of expenditure is as important should not be underestimated. Out of pocket expenditure
Importantly, the DOH also attracts an important important to assess the relative amounts of Government
as the quantity of expenditure. A recent World Bank is still the largest source of health expenditure in the
share of total government expenditure. Securing resources going to the health sector compared to other
Public Expenditure Review examined both the quantum Philippines, and rising rapidly (Chart 7). Furthermore, in
and sustaining an absolute increase in the budget, as (competing) sectors, as this reflects government’s overall
and efficiency of public expenditure in the Philippines, and Indonesia a form of UHC induced an increase in out of pocket
evidenced in Chart 3 above, is good evidence of a renewed priorities. Chart 6 below shows that the health sector
concluded that: expenditures amongst the second and third lowest quintiles
political commitment to the health sector. But it is also ranks fifth in terms of budget allocations.
because increased financial means to access health care
Chart 6. Largest recipients of national budget allocations (billion pesos)
‘… shortfalls in the size of public spending generally resulted in patients being prescribed drugs not covered by
appear to be more important than shortfalls in the the UHC and for which they must then pay out of pocket (45).

2012 Chart 7. Health expenditure by source of funds, 2009-2011 (in millions of pesos)11
Education
2011
2012 Health  Expenditure  by  Source  of  Funds,  2009  to  2011    
Public Works and Highways
2009 (in  Million  Pesos)  
 250,000    

2009 2010 2011


Social Welfare and Development
 200,000    

Agriculture
 150,000    

Health  100,000    

 50,000    
Agraian Reform

 -­‐        
Environment and Natural NG   LGU   NHIP   EC   OOP   Pvt  Insurance   HMO   Pvt   Pvt  Schools   Grants  
Estabilshments  
Resources Source: National Health Accounts 2009
to 2011, NSCB

Trad and Industry


Secondary source (with permission): Dr Aldaba, University of Philippines.
0 50 100 150 200 250
NG – National government; LGU – Local Government Unit; NHIP – National Health Insurance Program; EC – Employees Compensation; OOP
11

Source Department of Budget and Management – out of pocket

22 PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT 23
A relevant issue from a political economy perspective measures to increase tax compliance, reduce illicit flows Chart 8: Benefit Payments by PhilHealth (in billion pesos), June 2014
is also to understand both the sources, and the uses, and curb tax competition among countries. Other sources
of increased government expenditure on health. The of government revenue, particularly in countries rich in
sources of increased expenditure are important because natural resources, should also be explored .”(44) 40000 %INC/(DEC)
the raising of additional revenues can be progressive (that
is, additional revenue is raised disproportionately from the Furthermore, the uses of government expenditure – 33.95 Lifetime Member 29%
35000
wealthier quintiles) or regressive (additional revenue is where, on what, why and how that expenditure will occur
Indigent 16%
raised disproportionately from the poorer quintiles). It is – are relevant to assessing priority settings and impacts. 30000
not exactly clear what the situation is in the Philippines. Government expenditure on curative treatment or end of 26.19 Informal 72%
However the fact that Value Added Tax, which is applied life care in tertiary hospitals, or on fee for service diagnostic
25000 Formal 16%
on most goods and services, is the major source of tests by private doctors, are likely to have a very different
national government revenue means that it is likely to be socio-economic impact than expenditure on promotive and
regressive12 to the extent that the poor do purchase items preventive health in primary and secondary care settings.
20000
subject to VAT (46). The recently released Chatham House
Report on health financing identifies other pro-poor, pro- An example of good use of government revenue is the 15000
health options for government revenue: shrewd use of political capital by President Aquino to use
increased taxation on tobacco and alcohol as a means of 10000
“Every government should consider improved and simultaneously increasing revenue for the expansion of
innovative taxation as a means to raise funds for health. UHC, while reducing the burden of non-communicable 5000
Promising policies include the introduction or strengthening diseases. This was particularly noteworthy from a political
of excise taxes related to tobacco, alcohol, sugar and economy perspective (Box 1). 0
carbon emissions, and these should be combined with 2013 2014

Source: PhilHealth (49)


Box 1: The “sin tax” on tobacco and alcohol to fund UHC

A win-win for public health and public finance for the poor where the evidence base shifted from public
health to public economics The Philippines has traditionally had one of the lowest rates of tobacco taxation – Scaling up health insurance has major implications The private sector is a dominant part of the Philippines
and consequently one of the highest rates of tobacco use – in the region. This is the result of strong lobbying by for government and household budgets. A recent health financing system, but is often overlooked in
international tobacco companies and member of Congress representing tobacco growing districts. The scientific UHC costing exercise estimated that ‘the total costs priority setting, planning and budgeting. As seen in
evidence that tobacco is a major cause of premature death and disability is well beyond dispute. The tobacco of expanding effective universal coverage (adequate Chart 9 the private sector, including private out of pocket
industry therefore shifted ground away from the public health arguments across to public economic arguments. financial protection) will be approximately P 408.6 billion payments for health care, is the dominant part of the
They argued smuggling would increase; jobs and revenue would be lost; and the poor would suffer the most from ($908 million) over the medium-term (2012-16). This could health care financing system in the Philippines. Private
increased taxes on tobacco and alcohol. All such claims by the tobacco industry have been shown to be myths result in a doubling of public spending on health as a sources account for 69% of all health financing in the
(47, 48). President Aquino astutely steered a “Sin Tax Law” through Congress that shrewdly allocated additional share of GDP by 2016 (Baseline: 1.3% of GDP in 2009). Philippines, growing at 12.4% a year. The private sector,
revenues from tobacco and alcohol to financing the Universal Health Care scale up. In a politically astute move, This would not only expand coverage among the poorest including the for-profit and the not-for-profit sectors
President Aquino also ensured that the increased public revenue from the increased taxes was also used to households in the Philippines (5.2 million households as well as pharmacies, are also important providers
compensate tobacco farmers who may have lost production. The law eventually passed Congress by only one targeted under the National Household Targeting System), of services. Interviews during the field visits confirmed
vote and the original proposal to raise PHP 60 billion was halved to reduce political resistance. but expand the depth and height of PhilHealth coverage that quality of private sector services varies greatly in the
to provide better financial protection’ (42). However, Philippine from world class private hospitals in Makati and
expanding coverage may not improve health access and Manila, through to unregulated and unqualified providers.
The Philippines Administration’s plans for UHC also • Almost half (46%) of PhilHealth beneficiaries are the outcomes. Much depends upon the depth, and breadth, of Importantly, the normally well-respected NGO sector in
provides important context for health financing in the very poor (‘indigent’ in PhilHealth terminology) and a coverage and what services are included. A bias towards the Philippines has experienced corruption scandals with
country. The Philippines is rapidly scaling up UHC, further 10% are from the informal sector.13 curative, hospital based treatment rather than primary “front” NGOs that have led to the arrest of Senators.
particularly through PhilHealth. Development partners • 90% of DOH-licensed hospitals are accredited with and preventive care would not help the poor. Under
familiar with the DOH as their main counterpart must PhilHealth, as are 1060 private institutional health providers UHC, private providers have an incentive fee for service
now engage strategically with social health insurance and 705 government-owned institutional providers. payment. But supplier induced demand for unnecessary
institutions as UHC expands. PhilHealth is clearly a key • Several benefit packages are of direct relevance to RRMNCH Caesarean Sections and the like would likely create budget
and strategic stakeholder in the overall health system of including the primary care package and the maternal care blowouts for government and households, often for little
the Philippines, particularly with respect to the poor. As of package. Revision of these packages is in progress. increase in health outcomes.(50)
June 2014 PhilHealth (49) reported that: • Benefit payments from PhilHealth totalled P34 billion
($755 million) as of June 2014. Benefit payments are
• It now provides health insurance for 82% of the increasing over the previous year and are paid reasonably
Philippines population: around 81.5 million equally between contributing groups (Chart 8).

12
A person from the lowest quintile paying P50 VAT on any item will lose significantly more relative disposable income than a person from the
highest quintile paying the same P50 VAT on the same item.
13
The formal sector constitutes 40% of beneficiaries and special categories.

24 PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT 25
Chart 9: Sources of health care financing in the Philippines and implementation. The same joint study (39) identified present and show the links between the purpose, outputs,
several political economy challenges that had weakened outcomes and costs of different activities. Part of the aim
planning and priority setting. More specifically, the is to increase the effectiveness and efficiency of resource
AMOUNT (in million pesos, at current prices) report found: allocation. DBM states that “performance information
SOURCE OF FUNDS Growth Rate
can be used as a signalling device. Low performance or
20111/ 2012
• Formidable political economy challenges to a decline in performance can serve as an alarm bell that
GOVERNMENT 84,139 86,423 2.7 efforts for more transparent and accountable local ought to trigger a closer look into the reasons behind low
government functioning, and a recommendation to not performance” (52). But it is also clear that Government,
National Government 51,940 53,176 2.4
underestimate such obstacles, and to keep expectations through DBM, intended to send a strong political
Local Government 32,199 33,247 3.3 realistic. While the Local Government Code established economy message through these reforms: that old style
secondary regulations, institutions and linkages between patronage and back room deals were being replaced
SOCIAL INSURANCE 39,209 51,863 32.3
them, and coherent rules of procedure, enforcement has with new, publicly stated standards of transparency and
National Health Insurance been weak due to capture by dominant groups. accountability in priority setting, planning and budgeting.
39,104 51,750 32.3
Program • Either because of weak evolution over the last decade The public signalling of a more reformist approach is clear
Employees' Compensation 104 112 8.0 or persistent capacity challenges, some aspects of in DBM’s refreshingly candid claim that:
LGU operations remain underdeveloped and exhibit
PRIVATE SOURCES 289,655 325,526 12.4 vulnerabilities in transparency, accountability, efficiency “The new face of the Budget therefore represents
Private Out-of-Pocket 240,485 269,419 12.0 and effectiveness. the continuing shift away from the dominance of
• The workings of intergovernmental (fiscal, patronage politics and clientelistic relationships towards
Private Insurance 7,222 7,086 (1.9) administrative, and political) relations are a more responsive, transparent and accountable public
Health Maintenance particularly vulnerable to the instability induced expenditure management system…. With the adoption
28,944 33,181 14.6 by an excessively politicized system of rewards of performance informed budgets …, the government
Organizations
and allocations, and by uneven institutional strength is changing the face of the budget. Previously a mass of
Private Establishments 9,297 11,603 24.8
and resourcefulness among national executive, numbers and line items without a clear story on where
Private Schools 3,707 4,236 14.3 congressional, provincial, and city or municipal actors. funds are going, the National Expenditure Plan and the
Cumulatively, however, there is evidence that some General Appropriations Act beginning in FY2014 will show
REST OF THE WORLD 3,478 3,987 14.6
executives have tried to break from the dominant the link between the funds allocated for government
Grants 3,478 3,987 14.6 pattern of politics and taken risks outside the certainty programs and the projected results and outcomes of
of machine politics. More importantly, these executives these.” (52)
ALL SOURCES 416,480 467,798 12.3
have been rewarded by clear support from communities
Source: Philippines National Health Accounts (51) and interest groups, and especially by re-election.(39) “Bottom-up budgeting” (BuB) – also known as
“Grassroots Participatory Budgeting Process” –
A summary of these strengths and weaknesses is is also an effort to systematically facilitate and
included as Annex 5. institutionalise local needs of poorer communities
4.3 Health and RMNCH priority- during the process of sub national planning and budgeting.
The DOH also has a prioritisation process for allocating into planning and resource allocation. In essence, the
setting at national and resources, based on issues such as health impact, equity, The Philippines National Economic and Development Bottom up Budgeting (BuB) approach requires all National
Agency (NEDA) also provided a detailed, written, response Government Agencies – not just the Department of Health
sub-national levels political commitments, and correcting variation in health
performance levels. to questions on priority setting raised in the UNICEF – to formally allocate from 2013 onwards a per centage
Questionnaire developed for this analysis. NEDA’s of their budget to meet the priorities of local, poorer,
National planning and budgeting in the Philippines response is at Annex 6. It is clear that NEDA has, at least communities, and respond positively to local community
Subnational planning, budgeting and program
health sector is relatively strong. It is guided by planning on paper, a systematic and well organised approach to needs (53).
implementation have, however, been weak. A
documents and guidelines that have been strengthened priority setting and planning, with clear links between
comprehensive Asian Development and World Bank
recently and are still in the process of redevelopment and medium term strategic goals (including MDG goals) Importantly, the political objective of BuB is to
Study found several weaknesses 10 years after the
improvement, including with UNICEF support. This has and individual projects and activities on an annual basis. encourage / empower local communities to influence
Local Government Code was implemented: only 30-
been reported on extensively in Professor Don Matheson’s NEDA also uses a transparent, systematic, approach14 national level programs, including health, rather than
50% of LGUs had local development councils in place;
Inception Report for the Philippines Investment Case, to screening investment projects using five rational focusing on planning and budgeting at the sub-
the Development Plan formulated by the Regional
which concluded that: and relevant technical criteria: relevance and alignment national and local level alone. Civil society organisations
Development Council was seldom, if ever, taken into
consideration by the LGUs (they tend to focus on inter- to national priorities; severity of need; efficiency; (especially NGOs) assist local government units and
“The government has well developed planning and effectiveness and impact; and sustainability. municipalities in poorer areas to develop Local Poverty
provincial projects rather than on local development plans);
investment processes at the national and subnational Reduction Action Plans in any sector that are then
there was a disconnect between national and regional/
levels. Provincial and city investment plans for health There is also evidence that the Philippines wants to presented to national agencies in time for those plans to
provincial planning; LGU budget formulation and execution
translate national health goals into specific concrete make planning and budgeting more transparent, and be integrated into the regular budget preparation cycle.
was weak due to poor income estimates used by LGUs
actions at the local level. They become the basis for participatory. For example, the Department of Budget The BuB approach was developed following consultations
for budget formulation; over-expenditure on salaries; little
mobilizing and allotting resources from the national and Management (DBM) introduced “Performance with 609 of the poorest municipalities of the country. A
community participation in prioritising and monitoring
government and development partners to the LGUs. As Informed Budgets” during 2014. The aim is to more clearly trial involving P8.4 billion ($220 million) was conducted
projects; mis-procurement and poor financial controls. (39)
an investment planning tool for local health development,
a step-by-step Guide has been developed to provide
Political economy challenges explain much of the
pointers, tools, materials and references that can be used
acknowledged weaknesses in planning, budgeting 14
The screening criteria, including the sub-questions and weightings, is available on request.

26 PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT 27
in 2013, of which health related activities amounted to LGUs that enables national and local planners to track UNICEF is also supporting a training program for mayors Autonomy has also led to the blocking of modern family
P706 million ($17.5 million). Other community-determined progress on a range of strategically important outcome, that will give them exposure to thinking more systematically planning. Manila Mayor Lito Atienza successfully issued
projects included agriculture and fisheries support, potable output and process indicators. Table 1 below highlights the about meeting essential health needs for women and an Administrative Order that stopped all modern family
water supply, and basic education (53). The BuB approach main features of the scorecard approach, and the evidence children using their local budgets and resources. While too planning in the city of Manila: a population of well over 3
does not just give poorer communities a more formal say base used. It could be argued that 37 separate indicators early to gauge its impact, this program of support has the million people. Importantly the abolition of the logistics
in planning priorities, it is also an opportunity for them are too much for LGUs to track, and that there are often potential to sensitise mayors and decision makers to the system for purchasing family planning commodities, and
to generate additional revenue. That is because BuB severe problems in the accuracy of the data collected. need for health investments. cessation of training for midwives and nurses, meant that
resources is additional to the normal allocation they would Nevertheless, the approach is clearly systematic and ‘asks it took many years to return to a critical mass of capacity
receive from the Internal Revenue Allotment. For example, the right questions’ at the outcome, output and process But autonomy can lead to patronage. The Mayor of to provide modern family planning services even after he
Quezon City (where UNICEF is working with informal levels, and integrates indicators of inequity into the Davao has made Davao city entirely tobacco free. Davao’s was replaced. There was, in effect, systems inertia and
settlers) had an approved Local Poverty Reduction Action system. An important feature of the LGU Health Scorecard mayor allocates around P100 million (40% of the total health constraints that restricted rapid scale up of services.
Plan allocation worth around P50 million. system is also its user-friendly and intuitive approach. The budget) to the “Linggap” emergency health care fund
use of traffic light colours alerts Mayors and policy makers and then personally dispenses funding to individuals who “Champions” can be important advocates, or not.
The LGU health scorecard system is also evidence to priority issues. For example a change from green to red attend the Mayor’s office every Monday morning. The policy Much of the international literature on reforms in health
based, systematic, and easily used as a driver of or orange colouring for childhood immunisation coverage problem here is that such financing is entirely reactive to refers to the need for ‘leadership’ and champions’ (15,
improved priority setting, planning and resource in a particular district or municipality alerts decision makers individual claims (not strategic, forward looking or evidence 54-56). Local political analysis in the Philippines points to
allocation. DOH has developed a scorecard system for to a priority need. based); is essentially focused on curative measures (not the critical role that President Aquino played in steering
preventive or public health) and, by design or by implication, through the “sin tax” on tobacco and alcohol to fund
clearly involves patronage and clientism. Mayors in general UHC, and to allow modern family planning to occur in the
Table 1: Key features of the LGU Health Scorecard system
may have a political incentive to retain such a “hand out” Philippines (Box2) (57). On the other hand, well-intentioned
facility to the detriment of more institutional approaches. “champions” can also generate priorities and resource
Number of Typical example of indicator used as part of the The World Bank study on local service delivery made the allocation decisions that are not evidence-based and are
Strategic planning issue
indicators evidence base interesting finding that: not in the best interests of public health or the poor. For
example, a “Champion” in the Philippines Senate advocated
Increased numbers of enrolment in PhilHealth and the
One reason for the LGUs’ lack of interest in expanding for nation-wide screening of all newborns within three days
Financial risk protection 6 uptake rate amongst the poorest 20% and 40% of
PhilHealth coverage is political. From local politicians’ of birth to screen for certain inherited diseases.15 The policy
the population
perspective, funding the enrolment of indigents to the problem that arises is that each of the six diseases are rare;
LGU budget allocated to health (%) and maintenance and national health insurance program ran counter to the it is not-cost effective to screen all newborns, and there is
Efficiency of health sector spending 6
operating expenses (MOOE) (%) allocated to health. pervasive local political culture where local politician extend a high opportunity cost in terms of how resources used for
Bed numbers per population; Client satisfaction direct assistance to poor constituents who seek assistance screening could have achieved higher, pro-poor, impacts if
Health facility enhancement program 7 for emergencies. Simply put, local officials would much using evidence-based criteria for resource use.
survey results
rather reserve discretionary funds to provide personalized,
Internal management and support 3 Nurse to population ratio; Midwife to population ratio. direct assistance to their poor constituents rather than
allocate these to support the full coverage of indigents
Contraceptive Prevalence Rate; full immunisation rate (%);
Policy standards development and under a national program (40).
skilled birth attendance (%); TB case detection rate; health
regulations. Scale up of public health 15
workers receiving the full amount of allowances they are
interventions for the MDGs
entitled to receive (%). Box 2: The Reproductive Health Bill: the scientific evidence remained the same, but the political
environment changed dramatically.
Source: author’s summary from official documents The Philippines has long had one of the highest total fertility rates in the region, and highest levels of unmet
contraceptive need. The powerful Roman Catholic church consistently and vigorously opposed modern family
However there are clearly still ongoing challenges centralised, and authoritarian state would be in a position planning. Their power to affect politics was clear given that the Church had demonstrably been a critical player
in terms of priority setting, planning and budgeting, to pool and reallocate resources from richer to poorer in mobilising the overthrow of President Marcos in 1986. It could – and would – also specifically mobilise voters
including issues of inequity. The Philippines has wealthier provinces to some degree through a process known as to vote against candidates standing for Congress. Various Reproductive Health Bills have been languishing in
provinces, districts and cities and poorer ones. Devolution ‘fiscal equalisation’. However strong devolution of political Congress for over 13 years. Although the scientific evidence about the health benefits of family planning never
has tended to highlight the difference in economic, fiscal, and economic power to provinces, districts and cities – as changed, the political environment did. President Aquino used his political capital to strongly and astutely advocate
and managerial resources between the richer and poorer has occurred in the Philippines – reduces the institutional passage of Reproductive Health Bill (58). This was widely supported by the general public, and academics
areas. A World Bank study found significant ‘horizontal mechanisms to do that reallocation, even if there was including from the Roman Catholic Ateneo University. The Philippines “now has a law funding the distribution
inequity’ (inequity between different regions) as well as widespread consensus to do so. of free contraceptives, requiring government hospitals to provide reproductive health services, and mandating
‘vertical inequity’ (inequity within the same region). More public schools to teach sex education. It’s not a perfect law. The delivery of RH services remains the primary
specifically: “the “richest” LGU in its sample (a city in The field visits confirmed that decentralisation and responsibility of the national government - not local government units - and optional for most private hospitals.
Visayas) collected P442 revenue per capita (in constant increased autonomy for LGUs can benefit public health. Except in special cases, minors need parental consent to access family planning methods. Sex education is also
1985 Pesos) over 2003-07 whereas the “poorest” LGU (a The Mayor of Davao City had decided on his own accord optional for private schools”. (58) Nevertheless this is a major change in the political and public health landscape
province in Visayas) collected only P81 revenue per capita. to make Davao City virtually tobacco free for public health of the Philippines
The data also highlighted horizontal inequity across the reasons. This he has done via a strictly enforced City
same level of LGUs. Among the three municipalities in the Ordinance. In two full days in densely crowded Davao we
sample, one municipality in Visayas collected nearly twice saw only one person (surreptitiously) smoking a cigarette:
The six disorders tested for newborn screening are: congenital hypothyroidism; Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia; Galactosemia;
15

as much (P205) as another in Luzon (P117). A strong, highly a remarkable outcome for any city, let alone one in Asia. Phenylketonuria; Glucose-6-phospate-dehydrogenase deficiency; Maple Syrup Urine Disease.

28 PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT 29
Development partners can skew planning and spend undisbursed funds on big ticket items (vehicles developing plans based on data that is already 2 years The analysis also found that civil society activists were
funding priorities. In 2011 development partners or overseas training courses) in order to fully disburse out of date. As one senior official said “forward planning also important in building coalitions and coordinating
contributed around 1% of total health expenditure in the time-restricted funds and not jeopardise future funding. is, in effect, occurring by looking in a rear view mirror”. political inputs. The Asia Foundation and Overseas
Philippines (25). Despite this low share of expenditure, Philippines authorities, particularly those in poorer LGUs o “Progress” can be suppressed if it is perceived to lead Development Institute recently used two case studies
and despite the rhetoric and commitment to the Paris at sub-national level, will benefit as much from support to to fewer resources. One official speculated that, for in the Philippines to explore the political economy of
Declaration and its successor agreements, it is clear that improve administrative and financial accountability as they example, significantly reducing the incidence of malaria institutional reform. Both case studies – one dealing with
development partners can skew priorities. There was will from having more resources allocated. might result in funds for malaria control being reduced in land registration reform and the other with tobacco control
strong criticism from NEDA during interviews in Manila subsequent budget years. – involved active and astute advocacy by local Filipino
that development partners particularly ignored national The “new and innovative” can often displace the NGOs. In the case of the successful tobacco control
and regional priorities in disaster emergencies including “proven and essential”. Interviews confirmed that • Whose evidence? reform, the study concludes:
the recent Typhoon Haiyan. There is also a risk that the LGUs were under pressure to adopt new and innovative o PhilHealth asked a paediatrician to design the premature
focus on “results” by development partners will lead to initiatives from the DOH and/or local Mayors. Experienced newborn benefits package. Although well intentioned, There was a multimedia information campaign and some
short termism and funding activities that the Philippines officials noted that internal bureaucratic incentives meant the result was that the benefits package was inevitably civil society mobilisation of a classic sort, especially around
can do well already, including vaccinations, rather than it was difficult to resist pressures to adopt “the new”. curative and hospital focused. UNICEF was able to open the public health dimensions. But what tipped the balance
focus on the more difficult, essential, but less appealing Yet they also noticed that “the new” could displace a policy dialogue about more feasible and equitable in the end was the work of a dedicated core of individuals
issues of procurement reform. Professor Stephen the funding for basic operational budgets including the primary health care prevention and treatment. in a couple of organisations …. This core group was able
Howes, previously the Chief Economist in AusAID, per diems and fuel budget to allow nurses to vaccinate o NEDA commented that they rely on DOH statistics to address the severe coordination problems that normally
makes the important point that “efforts to improve children in remote areas. There was also little bureaucratic for maternal mortality, but that the DOH itself uses afflict broad-based campaigns. It was also in a position to
donor quality by strengthening performance feedback incentive to fund ongoing training of past – yet strongly only maternal deaths occurring in hospitals. This make tactical decisions about how to divide the opposition
can undermine efforts to improve recipient quality…. evidence based – programs. For example, retirements and would obviously under-estimate the number of deaths and make alliances, without the need for consensus other
Former USAID Administrator Andrew Natsios … writes a low level of ongoing training meant that there was a low occurring in remote and rural non-hospital settings, or than on the reform objective itself (7).
‘those development programs that are most precisely level of workers in Davao now trained in the Integrated urban slums, usually among poorer and more
and easily measured are the least transformational, and Management of Childhood Illnesses (IMCI). UNICEF vulnerable women. Annex 7 provides further details about sub-national EBaP
those programs that are most transformational are the bottleneck analysis found that only 26.3% public nurses arising from the site visits to Davao.
least measurable’”. (59) Having said this, expenditure on and midwives in Davao, and only 9.1% in Quezon City • When?
development programs is a major arena for corruption were currently trained in IMCI: a strongly evidence-based o There are clear and precise windows of opportunity Finally, despite being the major focus for health
and politicking, and it is imperative for partner funds to be and cost-effective approach for reducing child death and within the political cycles when the tabling of evidence expenditure, the private sector is not systematically
overseen carefully. For example, there are allegations that disease. will have a greater effect. taken into account in priority setting, planning and
Mayors aligned to national party leaders get preferential • NEDA advised that at the national level there are budgeting. Interviewees confirmed that there is some
access to development resources. Political controversy UNICEF’s investment case work has focused on the use some opportunities to shape policies in the period formal engagement with the private sector medical
can escalate quickly and from unexpected quarters. of evidence in planning, prioritisation and budgeting. before the Presidential and Congressional elections, associations at the national level, but little engagement
Opponents of President Aquino are now seeking his Interviews in Manila, and field visits to Davao and Quezon when candidates are looking for measures that at local levels. Interviewees in both the public and private
formal impeachment over the reallocation of undisbursed City, confirmed that ‘evidence’ does not exist in a vacuum: can be implemented in their term of office. sector said that part of the difficulty in engaging with the
funds from the well-intentioned and developmentally what evidence; whose evidence; when does the evidence However, they also advised that personalities were private sector was the absence of formal structure of
oriented Disbursement Acceleration Program. arrive; and how is it presented are all key political as or more important than the policies themselves. the private sector. Individual specialities had associations
economy factors in determining if it can be used by • However at the local level the opportunities to that pursued their own agendas, but there was not an
Upstream EBaP becomes irrelevant if downstream policy makers, as exemplified in some of the responses shape policies occur more after the elections are overarching, cohesive, framework for engaging with the
implementation and procurement are ill-suited to provided: over. (Elections at the local level are based more on private sector on policy matters. Some interviewees noted
increased resources. Several senior and well-educated personalities: they then need to decide what to do.) that many NGOs, and some in the media, tended to have
officials from a wide spectrum said during the field visits • What evidence? • Budget cycles are also important: advocates for an ideological bias against the private sector, especially
that the biggest challenge they faced was no longer a o Regions and even LGUs focus on the top 10 causes funding must start dialogue with officials in March what was seen as “big pharma”. This, in turn, may have
shortage of funds. Rather, the ‘binding constraint’ for of mortality as the evidence base for setting priorities. and April, in order to meet the call for proposals in coloured politicians’ and officials’ appetite for engaging
them was that financing was now increasing rapidly, However, even if the mortality data was accurate (see July. It is also critical to support officials during publicly with the private sector.
yet the systems they had for procurement and financial below) this overlooks morbidity, disability, and health the July period and afterwards, building political/
management were still tailored to a period of austerity and promotion. bureaucratic capital and familiarity on their part.
small scale purchases. Several officials said independently o Progress against the MDGs is frequently and
that they needed training in consultancy management for consistently cited as the explicit targets to reach, even • How it is presented?
outsourcing and procurement management, rather than at an LGU level. However, MDG targets are distal o The EBaP graphs prepared by UNICEF during the
training on planning itself. indicators for small LGUs, and do not address non- investment case work gave local stakeholders
communicable diseases (NCDs) or inequity. confidence to communicate and advocate with
Implementation is arguably more important than o There are important data gaps. The United Nations a wider and non-technical audience. Some local
planning. The increasing availability of financial resources classifies Philippines as one of 67 countries with civil mayors or politicians may only have a primary school
flowing through to LGUs in the Philippines has put registration data characterized as complete, with good education. Complicated statistics and dense reports are
increased – and changing – demands on capacity and attribution of cause of death data. Nevertheless the poor intimidating.
skills. Historically, LGUs were used to small grants and and vulnerable may not be included, and household
so had little experience or incentive to improve their survey data from such communities are not usually
capacity for implementation or finance, procurement or available to compare.
contract management. Yet In such situations, officials must o Data is often out of date. NEDA officials noted they are

30 PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT 31
5. Recommendations
The preceding section analysed the current situation. effective than grass roots community-based monitoring
This Section makes observations and recommendations of attendance in reducing absenteeism and corruption,
about how the Philippines and its development partners a finding shared by Olken’s research in Indonesia
can build on the preceding analysis to further improve (63). Political economy issues will still arise of course:
development effectiveness. The aim of this Section is to inspectors may seek bribes and public sector unions may
offer practical, “actionable” recommendations. resist inspection. But an estimated cost: benefit ratio of
1018 is a strong incentive for government to resolve the
Development partners should understand the politics political economy challenges.
of the Philippines but stay distant from it. Expenditure
on development programs can be a major arena for PhilHealth is a major strategic opportunity to influence
corruption and politicking. The worst case outcome for nation-wide access to health care that can benefit the
UNICEF or another development partner would be to cross poor, including women and their children. As noted,
the line and have its evidence or approach captured by a PhilHealth covers 82% of the population of the Philippines,
political process or be seen to be partisan, especially by or 81.5 million people. While the benefits package is
beneficiaries or other partners attempting to rise above currently limited in size and scope, it is developing and
partisanship. growing over time. The future design of the premiums,
benefits package and the payments schedule will change
Like most LMICs, the Philippines needs better quality the incentives for poor people to access essential health
data to inform planning, monitoring and regulation care. UNICEF has already been influential in making
of programs. Data is more important than ‘tools’, but the benefits package for newborn care more focused
the data needs to be appropriate. Virtually all officials on primary and preventive health care, thereby making
interviewed during the field visits said that the system for the program more evidence based, affordable and cost-
prioritising and planning were satisfactory or at least ‘good effective for society and for individual households. There
enough’. However many officials said that a key problem are ongoing opportunities for development partners
was lack of reliable and regular data. Several stressed including UNICEF, the World Bank, ADB, WHO and others
that household expenditure data would be a particularly to assist PhilHealth to scale up and redesign its health
valuable source of evidence to help shape priorities, insurance program in ways that are evidence-based and
planning and resource allocation. On the other hand, serve the interests of the poor.
some officials during field visits suggested they needed
better estimates of the maternal mortality ratio in their Mayors are particularly powerful in the Philippines,
LGU, which is unlikely to be feasible or accurate enough and should be engaged for local support of development
to guide related programs. Many nations are starting to initiatives. However, medium and longer term health
pay attention to the value of data, especially those whose issues may not align with their short terms of office. On
decentralisation demands local information. This is a the other hand, many will rotate within the civil service,
4.4 Procurement and logistics In the Philippines, each local government similarly
manages its own system of drug procurement, inventory,
highly appropriate area of focus for the government and taking their knowledge and experience with them as they
development partners alike. move on. UNICEF support for capacity building for Mayors
Procurement and logistics have been challenging dispensing, and financing. The quality of locally procured on the benefits of EBaP and local investment in pro-poor
under decentralisation, raising issues of priority drugs is generally poor, the purchase price is often higher Effective implementation of well-designed17 regulation health outcomes, particularly RMNCH, is important.
setting, quality of services, and corruption. International than in private pharmacies, stock shortages are frequent, can generate social benefits and fiscal resources far
research finds that government and development partners and irrational drug use occurs. A principal reason is in excess of the associated costs. A recent study in Well informed media coverage, including radio
tend to focus on upstream planning, but fail to follow- that local therapeutic committees are not constituted, India found that almost one quarter of school teachers and social media, is often a key factor in shaping
up on downstream implementation (10). An evaluation not functioning, or not well trained in modern drug are absent without approval at an estimated cost to public opinion. In an increasingly connected world,
conducted in 2011 found that very strong, evidence- management. Local drug procurement is also corrupt government of around $1.5 billion/year. However it also even in nations whose governments attempt to control
based, subnational plans for RRMNCH in the Philippines in many places: bids are rigged, qualified bidders are found that “investing in better governance by hiring social and mass media, it is increasingly important to
were abandoned part way through the financial year “pre-identified,” and bidders connive. Moreover, the more inspectors to increase the frequency of monitoring acknowledge access to and the content of information that
because procurement delays and sluggish financial flows supply chain extends only to urban centers; poor outlying could be over ten times more cost effective at increasing is disseminated. Journalists may not have the technical
overtook events. As mentioned already, mis-procurement municipalities rely on itinerant drug peddlers who arrive teacher-student contact time (net of teacher absence) expertise/time to analyse plans and budgets. Journalist
or delayed procurement often has a dramatic effect on infrequently (60). than hiring more teachers.”(62) Interestingly, “top down” training is an effective means of reducing the risk of
overall budget disbursement rates. Good plans that have (i.e. government) monitoring was found to be more misinforming the public, or of influencing the media in
involved extensive analysis and consultations have been China’s national government has also moved to regulate
abandoned part way through the year as a result of mis- pharmaceutical procurement in its decentralised
procurement or slow release of funds. health sector, for similar reasons (61). Efficiency and 17
Regulation has both costs (compliance costs, “red tape” and opportunities for corruption) and benefits (quality assurance, protection against
accountability in the areas of procurement and logistics exploitation). Costs can exceed benefits.
are important priorities for improvement in the Philippines. 18
Muralidharan et al (2014) state that in India “the cost of hiring enough inspectors to increase the probability of a school being inspected by 10
A study of the decentralisation experience in Indonesia, per centage points is Rs.448 million/year. However, the reduction in wasted salary from this investment in terms of reduced teacher absence
Philippines and Vietnam found that: amounts to Rs.4.5 billion/year, suggesting that the returns to investing in better governance are ten times greater than the cost.”

32 PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT 33
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36 PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT 37
Annex one: definitions of political economy Annex two: approach and methodology

There is no single, agreed definition of the term “political are to advance challenging agendas around governance, The following is an extract on initial thinking about Mcloughlin (2012) maps technical characteristics of
economy”. The OECD concisely says that: “Political economic growth and service delivery, which experience methodology and approaches written by Dr Midori service provision in particular sectors and sub-sectors
economy analysis is concerned with the interaction has shown do not lend themselves to technical solutions Sato. The full text is available on request. and identifies the political and governance implications of
of political and economic processes in a society: the alone…. It can also contribute to better results by these characteristics for provision.
distribution of power and wealth between different groups identifying where the main opportunities and barriers There are numerous analytical tools and approaches
and individuals, and the processes that create, sustain for policy reform exist and how donors can use their that could be used to examine governance and political These papers facilitate our understanding by providing an
and transform these relationships over time.”(16) Bueuran programming and influencing tools to promote positive economy of priority setting, planning and budgeting in the analytical toolbox to give shape to the complex web of
says “In its modern form, political economy studies change. This understanding is particularly relevant in fragile social sectors of developing countries. According to DFID’s incentive structures that affect sector performance. The
refer to the study of the relations between political and and conflict-affected environments where the challenge “how to note” on political economy analysis19, problem-driven analysis framework (Figure 2) presents a
economic processes which involve several factors such of building peaceful states and societies is fundamentally these tools are broadly divided into three types: 1) Macro- way of thinking about governance and political economy
as incentives, relationships, and the distribution of power political.(16) level country analysis (understanding how political and and the interaction between the three sets of
between various interest groups in society, all of whom economic systems of a country enable or hold back variables/factors and corresponding steps to analyse
have an impact on development outcomes”(66). The World Bank (17) says: overall development, and to identify strategic entry points those variables:
for programming in a country); 2) Analysis focused on
DFID has a more expansive description, which highlights What is political economy? Political economy (PE) is the particular sectors (understanding the interests, incentives (i) Identifying the problem, opportunity or vulnerability to
how political economy analysis can improve development study of both politics and economics, and specifically and institutions operating within a particular sector, be addressed,
effectiveness: the interactions between them. It focuses on power to inform the design of a sector programme)20; and 3) (ii) Mapping out the institutional and governance
and resources, how they are distributed and contested Problem-focused analysis (understanding and resolving a arrangements and weaknesses, and
Political economy analysis is a powerful tool for improving in different country and sector contexts, and the specific problem that may be encountered in a particular (iii) Drilling down to the political economy drivers, both
the effectiveness of aid. Bridging the traditional concerns resulting implications for development outcomes. PE donor programme)21. to identify obstacles to successful and progressive
of politics and economics, it focuses on how power analysis involves more than a review of institutional and change and to understand where a ‘drive’ for positive
and resources are distributed and contested in different governance arrangements: it also considers the underlying For example, the analytical process proposed by DFID/ODI change could emerge from and likelihood is of
contexts, and the implications for development outcomes. interests, incentives, rents/rent distribution, historical (Figure 1) broadly follows these three stages (including stakeholder support for various change options.
It gets beneath the formal structures to reveal the legacies, prior experiences with reforms, social trends, the above two levels of analysis at both country-level and
underlying interests, incentives and institutions that enable and how all of these factors effect or impede change sector/intra-sector-level) and supports DFID’s “Drivers of The second and third layers are differentiated in order to
or frustrate change. Such insights are important if we Change”22. emphasize that institutional and governance dimensions
as well as stakeholders and their interests, motivations,
Another option is a problem-driven framework for political power and behavior will be explicitly considered in the
economy analysis (Figure 2)23 which was informed by a second layer. The framework is useful in framing the
review by Wild et al., (2012),24 on governance and political concrete, problem-focused analysis and for structuring
factors affecting weak service delivery in three social the inquiry process, yet it has limitation, such as difficulty
sectors (education, health and water and sanitation) in in understanding linkages between wider country-level
multiple countries. dynamics and specific problem analyzed within specific
sector (Fritz et al., 2009).

19
DFID. (2009) Political economy analysis: how to note. London: United Kingdom Department for International Development.
20
Moncrieffe J, Luttrell C. (2005) An analytical framework for understanding the political economy of sectors and policy areas. London: Overseas
Development Institute.
21
Fritz V, Kaiser K, Levy B.(2009) Problem-driven governance and political economy framework: good practice framework. Washington DC: The
World Bank
22
A conceptual model that seeks to explain how pro-poor change arises as a result of the interaction between structures, institutions and
agents; useful to identify drivers for change, but less useful for understanding how political systems operate in practice.
23
Harris D. Applied political economy analysis: a problem-driven framework. London: Overseas Development Institute, 2013.
24
Wild, L., Chambers, V., King, M. and Harris, D. (2012) Common Constraints and Incentive Problems in Service Delivery. Working
Paper 351. London: ODI.

38 PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT 39
Figure 1: Stages in political economy analysis (taken from Moncrieffe and Luttrell, 2005) Other tools and approaches that can also be applied for within a short timeframe; other tools include, but are
political economy analysis include: “Power Analysis”25 by not limited to “Politics of Development” by DFID and
SIDA (Swedish), which focuses on the nature of power “Addressing Governance in Sector Operations” by the
relations, distribution of power, and incentives for pro-poor European Commission (EC).
reforms; “Strategic Governance and Corruption Analysis
(SGACA)”26 developed by the Netherlands’ Ministry All of the tools and approaches described above have
STAGE 1 of Foreign Affairs, which is very similar to “Drivers of strengths and weaknesses. Considering that there is
Change”, but with a more tightly structured process and great variety between, and within, the four assessment
BASIC COUNTRY ANALYSIS heavily relying on secondary sources of data conducted
HISTOROCAL / FOUNDATIONAL COUNTRY ANALYSIS

Figure 2: Problem-driven framework for applied political economy analysis (taken from Harris, D. 2013)

STAGE 2
Problem-driven framework for applied political economy analysis
UNDERSTANDING ORGANISATIONS, INSTITUTIONS AND ACTOR
*HISTORY *CHANGE PROCESSES *STRUCTURAL FEATURES *POWER *IDEOLOGIES
Key question: What is the specific Identification of:

1 Reflection
Problem
identification
‘problem’ to be addressed?
If there is more than one problem, can they
be clearly distinguished (e.g. operational
1. Poor outcomes to which PE issues appear to
contribute (for example, persistently poor development
outcomes, repeated failure to adopt sector reforms);
and developmental)? 2. Theory of change underpinning previous interventions
(if any) and their effectiveness.
STAGE 2A STAGE 2B STAGE 2C
2a: Structural Diagnosis: Context and Institutions 2b: Agency Diagnosis: Power, Incentives and behaviour
DEFINING INTRO-SECTOR RELATIONSHIP
THE SECTOR ANALYSIS BETWEEN PLAYERS Key question: What are the systemic features in place Key question: What combination of perceived
that are relevant to the problem? incentives influences the behaviour that leads to

I n t e r a c i o n
this problem?
• DETERMINING SECTOR • ROLE & • NATURE OR THE
BOUNDARIES RESPONSIBILITIES RELATIONSHIP
• MAPPING THE PLAYERS
IN THE SECTOR
• ORGANISATIONAL
STRUCTURE


BETWEEN PLAYERS
HOW PLAYER 2 Analysis of: Analysis of:

• MANAGEMENT & INFLUENCE THE 1. Relevant structural features, including demography, 1. The motivations (financial, political, personal,
geography (e.g. natural resource endowment), ideational, etc.) of relevant individuals and
LEADERSHIP POLICY PROCESS geopolitics, culture and social structure, historical organisations that shape their behaviour in ways
• FINANCING & SPENDING • POLICY FORMULATION, legacies, climate change and technological progress. relevant to the problem and potential reform.
NEGOTIATION & 2. The ‘rules of the game’: Relevant institutions, 2. The types of relationships and balance of power
• INCENTIVES & including formal laws and regulations and between those actors.
IMPLEMENTATION
MOTIVATION informal social political and cultural norms, 3. Relevant analytical concepts that provide some
• RESPONSIVENESS that shape power relations and, ultimately, insight into actors’ incentives and decision logics:
• CAPACITY
& CHANNELS OF economic and political outcomes. including credible commitment problems,
ACCOUNTABILITY collective action problems, information asymmetries,
principal agent relationships, heuristics and blases, etc.

3 Reflection
What can be
done?
Key question: Analysis of:
Assessment of the range of
potentially viable entry points, if
any, for external actors seeking
1. What is a plausible 1. Potential Change processes; and to facilitate this change. If viable
STAGE 3 pathway of change? 2. The realism of proposed entry points exist:
2. What actions can be change processes given the 1. Selection of appropriate
OPERATIONAL IMPLICATIONS proposed that support that constraints and opportunities inventions and modalities
pathway of change? identified in the analysis 2. Timing, tailoring and
sequencing of selected
intervention
STAGE 3A STAGE 3B STAGE 3C
DEFINING DETERMINING IDENTIFYING
OBJECTIVES ENTRY POINTS MODE OF
AND SUPPORT
EXPECTATIONS

25
Swedish International Development Agency. (2006) Power Analysis – Experience and Challenges
26
Clingendael Institute for the Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs. (2007) Framework for Strategic Governance and Corruption Analysis
(SGACA): Designing strategic responses towards good governance

40 PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT 41
Annex three: Inception Report for the Philippines education levels, the Philippines is ranked 114 on the latest
UNDP Human Development Index, ahead of Indonesia
to 36% coverage if the mother had no education). This
disparity is, intriguingly, as it is much larger than wealth
(121) that has a slightly higher GNI per capita, Bangladesh differences (94% immunisation coverage amongst the
(146) and Nepal (157). The per centage of those living in wealthiest, compared to 72% coverage amongst the
Country Political Economy Profile: The Philippines absolute poverty (< $ 1.25 a day PPP) in the Philippines poorest) or geography (88% coverage in urban areas and
has fallen only slowly from nearly two thirds (64.9%) 83% coverage in rural areas). Women’s access to essential
Key messages in 1991 to almost half (48.2%) in 2010, the latest year services is also demonstrably inequitable on several
• The Philippines has a large (96.7 million) and fast growing population. Poverty rates are still high: almost three available.(68) Similarly, the per centage of Filipinos living criteria. For example, 94% of women in the highest wealth
quarters of the population live below $2 a day. There is inequity in access and outcomes. below $2 a day (and therefore vulnerable to falling into quintile, 78% of urban women, and 73% of women with
• The Philippines has had a turbulent political history (including coups, and assassinations) and, until recently, a absolute poverty) has moved very slowly over the last a secondary education or more have births attended by
sluggish economy. Fiscal decentralisation in 1991 reflects political pressures at the time and decentralisation is 20 years from 84.9% of the population in 1991 to almost skilled health professionals compared to just 26% of the
yet to be fully worked through three quarters (74.26%) of the population in the latest year poorest wealth quintile, 48% of rural women, and 11%
• Expenditure on health is increasing in absolute and relative terms, albeit from a low base. available, 2010.(68) of women with no education. Inequity of access and
• There is a history of Government launching of health sector reforms, but arguably less commitment to outcomes has been a longstanding, stubborn, challenge in
sustained implementation. Government does appear strongly committed to scaling up UHC. This slow reduction in absolute poverty – the lowest rate the Philippines for decades, with multiple complex causes
• Private expenditure and private providers are important components of the health system. of any East Asia economy - is attributed to “dismal” (69) some of which overlap with the persistently high levels of
economic growth over the decades; limited employment poverty (76-79) (80)
intensive manufactured exports; high population growth;
low agricultural productivity; fragmented markets due to The resource allocation environment: proxy
the island geography; and lack of economic and political evidence of political priorities
competition that could provide open opportunities for
The political environment has the same weaknesses as seen recently in the USA: and commitment.
wealth creation and better service delivery.(4, 27, 70-74)
the potential for political logjams that prevent reform. The
The Philippines has had a turbulent political history since informal political system is strongly influenced by family Total health expenditure (THE) which includes public as
The Philippines is also characterised by high rates of
gaining independence from the United States (and prior political dynasties (Marcos family, Aquino family etc); the well as private expenditure on health was the equivalent
income and asset (especially land) inequality and inequity.
to that Spain) in 1946. The Philippines has experienced military; the Roman Catholic church; wealthy landowners of 4.5% of GDP in 2012, around the average for lower
The latest Gini index28 for the Philippines is 44.4 in 2006,
martial law during President Marcos’ long reign (1965- and business elites; and strong, articulate, NGOs. middle income countries (LMICs) globally.(68) As in much
little changed from 43.4 in 1991, and higher than the
86); a ‘people power’ revolution backed by the military, of Asia with poorly developed health insurance or pooling
latest Gini index for Indonesia (38.1), Nepal (32.8) and
churches, and civil society in 1986; a military supported Benigno Aquino (son of previous President Corazon mechanisms, much of the total health expenditure in the
Bangladesh (32.12). The latest available figures for the
removal of President Estrada; corruption claims against Aquino) became President in June 2010 based partly on Philippines is financed privately (ie not by government).
under-five mortality rate in the Philippines is 59/1000
three Presidents (Marcos, Estrada, and Arroyo); the his commitment to “inclusive growth” and anti-corruption. Furthermore, the vast bulk of private expenditure on
live births in the lowest wealth quintile compared to
assassination of a potential Presidential candidate (Ninoy President Aquino’s Liberal Party became the largest health is then financed directly out of pocket (ie without
17/1000 in the highest; 46/1000 in rural areas compared
Aquino) and of numerous journalists; and a longstanding party in the lower chamber of Congress during the May insurance). This is shown in Table 1 below. High levels of
to 28/1000 in urban; and 41/1000 for boys compared to
military conflict with Islamic separatists in Mindanao 2013 mid-term elections. However, lacking an outright direct out of pocket payments for health care are often a
34/1000 for girls. (75) There is a large disparity in DPT 3
and, until recently, communist insurgents. Attempted majority it was forced to form alliances (and therefore barrier to seeking essential care amongst the poor and / or a
immunisation among 1 year olds based on the education
coups and rumours of coups have been a feature of the compromises) with other parties. President Aquino’s term cause of financial distress and poverty: one reason why the
level of the mother (90 % immunisation coverage if the
Philippines’ political history. Decentralisation of political finishes in June 2016 and, under the Constitution, he is not Philippines is scaling up Universal Health Coverage.(81, 82)
mother had secondary or higher education compared
power (and service delivery of health etc) was rushed out eligible for re-election. Main parties and political groupings
in the early 1990s to forestall what was then feared to be in the Philippines are the Liberal Party; Lakas-Kabalikat
a return to highly centralised, authoritarian, rule replacing ng Malayang Pilipino-Christian Muslim Democrat (Lakas- Table 1: Levels of private, and out of pocket, expenditure on health care
President Corazon Aquino’s rule. One encouraging sign Kampi-CMD); Nacionalista Party; Nationalist People’s
of political adroitness and success against powerful Coalition (NPC); Pwersa ng Masang Pilipino (PMP); Country or grouping Private expenditure on health as % Out of Pocket Expenditure on
entrenched domestic vested interests was the ability of Partido Demokratiko Pilipino-Lakas ng Bayan (PDP-Laban); Total Health Expenditure Health as % private expenditure
the Philippines Government to recently raise taxes on Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP); Moro National in 2011 (per cent) on health (per cent)
tobacco, shrewdly allocating the increased revenue to Liberation Front (MNLF); Moro Islamic Liberation Front
(MILF)(67) Bangladesh 61.8 96.6
expand Universal Health Coverage for the population.
Indonesia 62.1 76.3
The Philippines has inherited a formal political structure The socio-economic environment Philippines 63.1 83.5
similar to that of the then colonial power USA. This has
the benefit of a clear separation and balance of power The Philippines has a Gross National Income27 (GNI Low Income Countries globally 61.1 76.2
between the Executive, legislature, and judiciary. But it per capita) of $ 3270 in 2013(68) making it a lower Lower Middle Income Countries globally 63.4 87.1
middle income country. With generally good literacy and
Source: World Health Statistics 2014

27
GNI is a better measure of economic wealth as, unlike Gross Domestic Product, GNI captures the effect of overseas remittances: key
issues in Asia. 28
A standard measure of inequality where 0 equals total equality and 100 is total inequality, with one person owning all income

42 PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT 43
Per capita expenditure on health is rising off a low base in including especially women and children. But resources The environment for RMNCH and the health from 42.5/1000 to 23 / 1000 over the same period. (85)
the Philippines. As shown in Chart 1 below, real (adjusted (money, health personnel, political capital) are always sector more broadly. The Philippines has moved from having the 59th worse
for inflation) per capita expenditure on health in Purchasing scarce, especially in developing countries. Where, why, rate for U5MR in 1990 to 30th in 2012.As noted above,
Power Parity29 terms in the Philippines was generally low and how the political / bureaucratic system allocates its Life expectancy at birth (both sexes) had improved from there are substantial and persistent inequalities of
($ International 70 per person per year) and flat from 1995 scarce resources is therefore the true litmus test of what is 60.8 in 1990 to 68.5 years in 2012. (83) However, like access and outcomes based on wealth, education levels
to 2003. It then rose steadily (purple line, at the top of actually a priority to the decision makers. As seen in Chart other countries in the region, the Philippines, is facing a and geography, but these are nevertheless substantial
Chart 2) since then, reaching $ International 202.50 per 2, the Government of the Philippines has allocated (purple “double burden” of communicable and non-communicable achievements at a national level.
capita in 2012, higher than the LMIC global average of $ line) only around 8% of total government expenditure to diseases. More specifically, communicable, maternal,
International 177.(68) the health sector for more than a decade prior to 2008. The perinatal and nutritional conditions still constitute 30% Less promising is the situation for reproductive health,
share of government expenditure allocated to health has of all deaths for all ages; NCDs (especially cardiovascular maternal health, and nutrition. The contraceptive
Virtually all countries make bold political commitments to risen since then to 10.3% by 2012 (68) partly reflecting the disease) constitute 62% of deaths, and injuries constitute prevalence rate is less than half (48.9%) and the
improving health outcomes for the poor and vulnerable, commitment to Universal Health Coverage. 8%.(84) An estimated 44% of male and 35% of female Total Fertility Rate is 3.1 (83) : higher amongst poorer
NCD related deaths are premature.(84) communities. Over one fifth (21%) of babies are low birth
weight.(83) The prevalence of moderate to severe stunting
Chart 1: Real per capita expenditure on health Reproductive, maternal newborn and child health show is 32%. (83) Overweight and obesity rates are increasing.
mixed progress. On the positive side, UNICEF statistics The adjusted maternal mortality ratio is 99 /100,000 live
show that the under-five mortality rate, and infant mortality births.(83) As seen in Chart 3, the MMR in the Philippines
rate, have both steadily fallen by more than half since (bottom line) is lower than other comparable countries, but
250.0 there has also been much less progress over the years in
1990: the U5MR falling steadily from 60/1000 live births
in 1990 to 29/1000 in 2010, and the IMR falling steadily reducing the ratio of deaths.

200.0
Chart 2 Share of government expenditure allocated to the health sector
Health
expenditure per 150.0
capita, PPP 2005,
150.0
International
dollars 100.0
14.0

50.0 12.0

Health 10.0
0.0 expenditure
(public) as% 8.0
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
total government
expenditure 6.0

Bangladesh Indonesia Nepal 4.0


Philippines LICs globally LMICs globally
2.0

Source: World Development Indicators 2014 0.0

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012
Bangladesh Indonesia Nepal Philippines LMICs globally

Source: World Development Indicators 2014.

In essence, Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) is an estimate that seeks to avoid market exchange rate movements and takes into account the
29

fact that prices of goods and services may well be lower in developing countries. It expresses figures in notional “International dollars” or $ I
to distinguish the estimates from $US.

44 PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT 45
Chart 3: Maternal mortality ratio References

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48 PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT 49
Annex four: List of people interviewed in the Organisation/ individual’s Title of individual Email

Philippines name (in alphabetical order)

PhilHealth
The following is the list of those people interviewed Department of Health, Manila; Department of Budget and
Leizel P. Lagrada OIC- Vice President, Quality Assurance Group
in the Philippines during the period 14-25 July 2014. Management; Australian Department of Foreign Affairs
Health Insurance Products -PCB and MDG
Organisations, and names of individuals, are listed in and Trade (DFAT) and the World Bank but could not be
Philippine Health Insurance Corporation. Also
alphabetical order. Interviews were requested with the accommodated in the time available.
Head Executive Staff Office of the Chairman
of the Board Philippine Health Insurance
Corporation.
Organisation/ individual’s Title of individual Email
name (in alphabetical order)
UNICEF
Raoul Bermejo 111 Health Specialist, Health and Nutrition Section. rbermejo@unicef.org
Civil Society Organisations Manila
Maria Calimag President, Philippine Medical Association erviecalimag@gmail.com Augusto Rodriquez Chief, Social Policy Section, Manila. arodriguez@unicef.org
May-I Fabros Executive member, Womanhealth Philippines Inc Pura Angela Wee Health Specialist, Manila pwee@unicef.org
Junice Melgar Executive Director, Likhan Centre for Women’s Junice@likhaan.org Willibald Zeck Chief, Health and Nutrition, Manila Wzweck@unicef.org
Health, Quezon City
Ana Maria Nemenzo National Coordinator, Womanhealth ananemenzo@yahoo.com University of the Philippines
Philippines Inc
Bernardino Aldaba Economist. Consultant dinoaldaba@gmail.com
Regina Ingente Executive Director, Development of Peoples
Ernesto Domingo Professor, Universal Health Coverage Study eochoadomingo@yahoo.com
Foundation, Davao
Group, University of the Philippines, Manila
Aleli Kraft Associate Professor, School of Economics adpkraft@econ.upd.edu.ph
Davao City officials
Marilyn Lorenzo Professor, Universal Health Coverage Study rppaterno@up.edu.ph
Florencia Cayon
Group, University of the Philippines,
Project Monitoring and Evaluation Division Chief,
Carlo Panelo Associate Professor, Social Medicine Unit, capanelo@yahoo.com
City Planning and Development Office, Davao
Department of Clinical Epidemiology
Alice Crumb Planning Officer, Department of Health Regional alicerhodora@yahoo.com
Ramon Paterno Universal Health Coverage Study Group, rppaterno@up.edu.ph
Office, Region XI.
University of the Philippines, Manila
Floremae Lofranco Budget Officer 11
Orville Solon Professor, University of Philippines School Orville.solon@gmail.com
Melchor V. Quitain City Administrator, Davao City of Economics. Chief of Party, Health Policy
Joy Josephine Villafuerte City Health Officer, Davao City Development Program

National Economic and Devt


Authority (NEDA) in Davao
Janice Cerezo Senior Economic Development Specialist, Janice_cerezo38@yahoo.com
National Economic and Development Agency,
Region XI
Mae Ester Guiamadel Chief Economic and Development Specialist, metguiamadel@gmail.com
National Economic and Development Agency,
Region XI
Fely Rabe Senior Economic Development Specialist, felyrabe@yahoo.com
National Economic and Development Agency,
Region XI

National Economic and Devt


Authority (NEDA) in Manila
Roma Atabug UNICEF Program Coordinator rmatabug@neda.gov.ph

Erlinda Capones Director IV, Social Development Staff emcapones@neda.gov.ph

Tom Javate Social Development Group tpjavate@neda.gov.ph

50 PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT 51
Annex five: Strengths and weaknesses of the Priority setting, Strengths of the Philippine system Weaknesses of the Philippines system
planning and from a political economy perspective from a political economy perspective
Philippines system of priority setting, planning budgeting issue

and budgeting Budget allocation and


budget execution
Social sectors attract the majority of public
resources at the national level.
Highly politicised. Congressional and local
mayors have high degree of discretion that
breeds a reactive (not strategic) and patronage
DBM has a task force that reviews budget based approach to expenditure.
Priority setting, Strengths of the Philippine system Weaknesses of the Philippines system releases and reviews projects at that time
planning and from a political economy perspective from a political economy perspective Mayors can basically overrule previous
budgeting issue evidence based plans
Evidence and data base Increasingly output / outcome oriented. MDG and other distal outcomes are far Sources and uses of Excise duties on tobacco and alcohol then Sources of funds tend to be from VAT which is
removed from the political cycle. funds in the health used for expanding UHC is a world class regressive compared to income tax. Uses of
Philhealth benefit package for NCDs sector example of a “win win” for public health funds hard to determine but much appears to
screening is based on WHO evidence based Lack of data, or capacity to interpret data and fiscal space, as well as making financial be going to tertiary level, private hospitals.
and cost-effective “Package of Essential strategically, at the LGU level. resources more predictable, sustainable, and
NCD’ (PEN)” approach less amenable to political diverting for pet
projects
Very hard to get data about, let alone from,
Efficiency, effectiveness Public Expenditure Report (PER) finds that
the private sector even though they are
and equity of public efficiency of public expenditure in social sectors
prominent in health (especially hospitals) and
expenditure is in line with comparator countries. However
education.
the quantum of public expenditure is low.
The poor and vulnerable not included in vital
Trialling of new program budgeting approach
registration statistics
by DBM links budget lines to outputs and
Planning process overall The formal system, and the criteria used, Implementation is weak (see below). outcomes.
are generally of very high standard, are
rational, and strategic. NEDA Investment Expenditure is pro poor for primary level
Coordinating Committee uses cost benefit education but pro rich for tertiary.
and cost-effectiveness.
National Government spending on public health
The “Performance Informed Budgeting” Very strong and unanimously held view that has been progressive, while spending on
moves to program based budgeting e.g. decisions are actually made on the basis of hospital services is regressive. In the aggregate, National Government health
“Previously a mass of numbers and line “who you know” and “informal advisers”. spending is regressive, since hospital services
items without a clear story on where funds Between 2003-2007, total spending on the account for over three-quarters of total NG
are going, the National Expenditure Plan and health sector became less regressive because health spending.
the General Appropriations Act beginning in of the increase in the share of public health
FY2014 will show the link between the funds expenditures in the overall DOH sector budget.
allocated for government programs and the
Implementation Scale up of PhilHealth – while not perfect - Variable but generally very weak. Provinces
projected results and outcomes of these.”30
indicates substantial scale up is possible and LGUs have planning, budgeting,
contracting and procurement processes that
There is a high level of “formal” transparency.
are still suited to an era of scarce resources,
Participation in priority Generally very strong at the national level. Private sector is large but is rarely consulted not large increases.
setting and planning in a meaningful – or at least transparent – way.
DOH rationalisation is seeing a reduction in
Bottom up budgeting is a serious effort. program managers and focal points at the
same time public expenditure is increasing.
Very strong and well informed NGO
Monitoring and LGU Scorecard system is clear and intuitive Some indicators are too distal (eg MDG
community (“Alternative Budget Initiative”)
evaluation indicators) to be relevant to LGUs.
has been producing its own very credible
“Alternative Budget” for many years.
Operational monitoring is adequate but there
is insufficient impact evaluation: a key gap
when funding is increasing rapidly.

http://www1.dbm.gov.ph/?reform=performance-informed-budget
30

52 PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT 53
Annex six: Explanation of priority setting and Assisting the NEDA Board in the performance of its
functions are seven cabinet-level interagency committees,
3. Investment Coordination Committee (ICC)

planning by the National Economic and Development as follows: The ICC consists of the Secretary of Finance, as
chairman; the NEDA Director-General, as co-chairman;
Authority (NEDA) of the Philippines 1. Development Budget Coordination Committee and the Executive Secretary, the Secretaries
(DBCC) of Agriculture, Trade and Industry, Budget and
Management and the Governor of the Central Bank of
The DBCC is composed of the Secretary of Budget and the Philippines, as members. The ICC has the following
1. How are national priorities set in your country? What The PIP contains the priority programs and projects to Management, as chairman; the Director-General of the functions:
is the process? To what extent does “evidence based be carried out by the national government in support of NEDA Secretariat, as co-chairman; and the Executive
planning” play in the setting of priorities? Do you ever the Plan. It is an instrument to target and monitor NG Secretary, Secretary of Finance and the Governor of the • Evaluates the fiscal, monetary and balance of
use formal criteria for including or excluding a program eg commitments and resources over the medium-term in Central Bank of the Philippines, as members. The DBCC payments implications of major national projects, and
cost effectiveness analysis? Which are the most powerful support of the PDP. It is intended to tighten the link among recommends to the President the following: recommends to the President the timetable of their
agencies inside and outside of government that help make planning, programming, budgeting and monitoring and implementation on a regular basis;
those decisions? How do budgets and staffing levels get evaluation. The PIP is prioritized through the Sectoral Level of annual government expenditures and the
changed to reflect those priorities? What happens if there Efficiency and Effectiveness Review (SEER) criteria. ceiling of government spending for economic and social • Advises the President on matters related to the
is a disagreement between the national level view of The formulation of the PDP 2011-2016 marks the first development, national defence, and government debt domestic and foreign borrowings program; and
priorities and a strong sub-national view of priorities? time that the government is utilizing the RMs – an service;
indicator framework that identifies the results chain • Submits a status of the fiscal, monetary and balance
The PDP Process from the subsector/intermediate outcomes to sector Proper allocation of expenditures for each development of payments implications of major national projects.
outcomes, and finally to the societal goal of “poverty activity between current operating expenditures and
The Philippine Development Plan (PDP) which in multiple dimensions reduced and massive quality capital outlays; and; 4. Social Development Committee (SDC)
embodies the country’s national priorities, serves as employment created.” The RMs contain statements of
the government’s guide in formulating policies and results to be achieved, corresponding links to specific Amount set to be allocated for capital outlays broken The Committee is composed of the Secretary of Labor
implementing development programs. The PDP is items of the government’s five major Guide Posts (based down into the various capital or infrastructure projects. and Employment, as chairman; the Director-General of
produced every six years which coincides with the election on the President’s 16-Point Agenda), indicators, baseline the NEDA Secretariat as co-chairman; and the Executive
of the new president. It translates the new administration’s information, end-of-Plan targets and responsible agencies. 2. Infrastructure Committee (InfraCom) Secretary, and the Secretaries of Education, Culture and
vision and development agenda into strategies, policies, Each chapter of the PDP has a corresponding chapter in Sports, Health, Interior and Local Government, Agrarian
programs and activities for the plan period. the RMs. The RMs replaced Strategy Planning Matrices The InfraCom is composed of the Director-General Reform, Agriculture, Social Welfare and Development,
(SPMs) which was used in the previous national plan of the NEDA Secretariat, as chairman; Secretary of and Budget and Management, as members.
In the deliberation phase of the PDP, the administration’s (MTPDP 2004-2010). Public Works and Highways, as co-chairman; and the
development agenda are converted into actual plans. The Executive Secretary and Secretaries of Transportation The SDC performs the following functions:
NEDA issues the planning guidelines and spearheads the The NEDA Board and Communications, Finance, and Budget and
convening of working committees and sub-committees Management, as members. The InfraCom does the Advises the President and the NEDA Board on matters
composed of various government agencies in-charge The powers and functions of the NEDA reside in the NEDA following: concerning social development, including education,
of the various sectors/chapters that compose the Plan. Board. It is the country’s premier social and economic manpower, health and nutrition, population and family
In the current PDP, a Plan Steering Committee (PSC) development planning and policy coordinating body. Advises the President and the NEDA Board on planning, housing, human settlements, and the delivery
and Planning Committees (PCs) were created. The matters concerning infrastructure development, of other social services.
PCs, through NEDA, conducted national and regional The Board is composed of the President as chairman, including highways, airports, seaports and shore
consultations among the various stakeholders – the Secretary of Socio-Economic Planning and NEDA protection; railways; power generation, transmission Coordinates the activities of government agencies
legislature, executive agencies, local government units, Director-General as vice-chairman, and the following as and distribution; telecommunications; irrigation, flood concerned with social development; and
private sector, and other stakeholders – to generate inputs members: the Executive Secretary and the Secretaries control and drainage, water supply and sanitation;
for the Plan and the Investment Program. The PCs then of Finance, Trade and Industry, Agriculture, Environment national buildings for government offices; hospitals Recommends appropriate policies, programs and
drafted the Plan chapters based on the inputs during and Natural Resources, Public Works and Highways, and related buildings; state colleges and universities projects consistent with the national development
the consultations and submitted it to the PSC. The PSC Budget and Management, Labor and Employment, Interior elementary and secondary school buildings; and other objectives.
harmonized the submissions of the PCs into an initial draft and Local Government, Health, Foreign Affairs, Agrarian public works;
Plan and presented it to the NEDA Board and the LEDAC. Reform, Science and Technology, Transportation and 5. Committee on Tariff and Related Matters (CTRM)
After incorporating the comments of the NEDA Board and Communications, Energy, and the Deputy Governor of the Coordinates the activities of agencies, including
the LEDAC, the PSC submitted the Plan to the President Central Bank of the Philippines. government-owned or controlled corporations involved The CTRM is composed of the Secretary of Trade and
for final approval. in infrastructure development; and Industry, as chairman, with the Director-General of the
NEDA, as co-chairman. Its members are the Executive
PDP accompanying documents Recommends to the President government policies, Secretary, the Secretaries of Foreign Affairs, Agriculture,
programs and projects concerning infrastructure Transportation and Communications, Environment and
The PDP formulation is accompanied by the preparation of development consistent with national development Natural Resources, Budget and Management, and
the Public Investment Program (PIP), the Results Matrices objectives and priorities. Finance, the Governor of the Central Bank, and the
(RMs), and the Regional Development Plans/Investment Chairman of the Tariff Commission.
Program.

54 PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT 55
The CTRM does the following: HLURB, NCIP, LPP, LCP, LMP and two private sector access to quality care delivery system and improve health Filipino People on poverty reduction and empowerment
representatives, the Committee is primary tasked to: governance. of the poor and vulnerable. Some programs supported
Advises the President and the NEDA Board on Tariff and include provision of basic education (elimination of all
related matters and on the effects on the country of Advise the President on matters concerning land use The planning and prioritization of programs and projects for resource gaps), Universal Healthcare Program, provision of
various international developments; and physical planning; maternal, newborn and child health is spearheaded by the decent and affordable housing and the Pantawid Pamilyang
Department of Health (DOH). Key policies and programs Pilipino Program, among others.
Coordinates agency positions and recommends national Formulate a national physical framework plan and other on these concerns requiring inter-agency inputs or action
positions for international economic negotiations; and inter-sectoral policies and programs that guide the are discussed in the Social Development Committee Public spending on social services is programmed to
rational utilization and management of the country’s (SDC). increase at least in the medium-term. The share of social
Recommends to the President a continuous land and other physical resources, and the preparation services to total budget increased from 28.2 per cent in
rationalization program for the country’s tariff structure. of sub-national physical framework plans; While family planning is sometimes seen as a sensitive 2010 to 34.5 per cent in 2011 in line with the government’s
subject, the passage of Republic Act 10354 known as the commitment to enhance the capabilities of the poor to
6. Regional Development Committee (RDCom) Promote the integration of land use and physical “Responsible Parenthood and Reproductive Health Act participate in the growth process. From 32.4 per cent in
planning policies, plans and programs, including disaster of 2012” laid down the government’s policy to “promote 2012, the share of social services expenditures to total
The RDCom was created by virtue of EO 257 risk management , into national socio-economic plans and provide information and access, without bias, to all budget (net of debt amortization) reached 34.9 per cent in
issued on 15 December 2003. It is composed of the and programs; methods of family planning, including effective natural and 2013 and is programmed at 37.2 per cent in 2014.
NEDA Director-General , as Chair. Its member are modern methods.”
the Secretaries of the Department of Budget and Decide and resolve land use policy conflicts among In addition, the government also prioritizes increasing
Management and of the interior and Local Government, agencies of the national government; Question: What is the fastest growing part of public expenditure on infrastructure to boost economic
RDC Chair or Co-chair each coming from Luzon, Visayas, the national budget now and over the coming services in the country through public construction and
and Mindanao and four (4) regional development expert Establish and maintain, in conjunction with various capital outlay with projects consisting of rehabilitation/
3 to 5 years?
from the private sector and academe. appropriate government agencies, a database system construction of roads and bridges, enhancement of
which would identify and classify the present and tourism access, and irrigation to support the agriculture
In line with the government’s priority agenda of reducing
The RDCom performs the following functions: possible uses of specific land areas, public and private, sector. Expenditure policy seeks to substantially increase
poverty incidence, the social services sector receives the
comprising the total land resource of the nation; and public infrastructure spending from 2.5 per cent of GDP in
largest budget among the other sector allocations from
• Formulates and monitors the implementation of 2013 to at least 5.0 per cent by 2016.
the period 2010 to 2014 (See Table 1). The budget supports
policies that reduce regional growth disparities, Provide policy directions to the Regional Land Use
the key result area (KRA) of the Social Contract with the
and promote rational allocation of resources among Committee in the performance of their physical planning
regions; functions.
Table 1. Allocation of National Government Expenditures (Obligation Basis), By Sector 2010-2014
• Serve as clearing house for key regional development Question: How are priorities for maternal, PARTICULARS Actual Actual Actual Adjusted Program
policy/programs proposals which impact on two or newborn and child health set in your country?
more regions;           2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Does that apply to family planning as well? ECONOMIC SERVICES 25.88 23.17 26.80 25.38 26.02
• Formulates and monitor implementation of the
Or is family planning treated a little differently SOCIAL SERVICES 28.23 34.48 32.38 34.87 37.16
framework for regional development of the Medium if that is seen as sensitive subject?
DEFENSE 6.22 4.49 4.07 4.46 4.09
Term Philippine Development Plan;
Priorities for maternal, newborn and child health, including GENERAL PUBLIC SERVICES 19.06 19.05 18.15 17.32 16.07

• Directs the formulation and review guidelines for the that of reproductive health, are in line with the country’s NET LENDING 0.63 1.14 1.50 1.32 1.10
regional allocation of agency budgetary resources; commitment to achieve the Millennium Development DEBT SERVICE 19.98 17.66 17.10 16.65 15.55
Goals (MDGs), particularly Goals 4 and 5. These goals    
• Periodically reviews the viability of the regional are embodied in the PDP 2011-2016 which guides the
TOTAL (Net of Debt
configuration of the country and recommend to the government’s formulation of policies and implementation 100.00 100.00 100.00 100.00 100.00
Amortization)
President the re-delineation of regions, as may be of development programs and projects. It should be noted
that even before the MDGs, the government has already                    
necessary; and
identified the need to address maternal, newborn and child
Source: Budget of Expenditures and Sources of Financing, various years
• Periodically reviews the composition, structure and health as priority health objectives.
Department of Budget and Management
operating mechanism of the Regional Development
Councils and recommend to the President changes The PDP and the National Objectives for Health sets
as may be necessary. all the health program goals which operational strategy
for improving the country’s health status is called the
7. National Land Use Committee (NLUC) Kalusugang Pangkalahatan (KP) or Universal Health Care.
The NLUC was created by virtue of Executive Order KP seeks to ensure equitable access to quality health
Nos. 770 and 770-A on 01 December 2008 and 30 care by all Filipinos beginning with those in the lowest
September 2009, respectively. income quintiles. Its strategic thrusts are: (1) achieve
health-related Millennium Development Goals (MDGs);
Composed of NEDA (Chair), DENR, DA, DAR, DTI, (2) improve financial risk protection by expanding national
DPWH, DOTC, DOT, DILG, DOJ, DOST, DOE, HUDCC/ health insurance coverage and benefits, and; (3) ensure

56 PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT 57
Question: What has been the trend in
generating government revenue over
To achieve the medium-term targets, revenue-enhancing
measures will focus on heightened collection efforts of the
Annex seven: Evidence based planning and
the last 5 years? What is the forecast for BIR in tandem with anti-smuggling strategies of the BOC
in coordination with relevant government agencies. In the
budgeting in Davao City
government revenue generation over the case of the BIR, enhanced tax collection will be supported
coming years? by increased collection efficiency from the self-employed The problem of malnutrition, as well as practical cost- Furthermore, the nutrition interventions are now
business and professionals, better assessment of estate effective solutions, both rest on a solid evidence base institutionalised as an ongoing program. Executive
From a contraction of 6.6 per cent in 2009, to a single-digit taxes, and strengthened Fiscal Unit/Revenue Intelligence already. UNICEF documents state that the Philippines Order 26/2014 of the Office of the City Mayor of Davao
growth of 7.5 per cent in 2010, total revenues rose by 12.6 Unit. On the other hand, BOC’s comprehensive anti- has one of the highest under-five mortality rates in the formally and permanently integrated the Integrated
per cent, 12.9 per cent and 11.8 per cent in 2011, 2012 and smuggling strategies will include port accreditation, East Asia and Pacific region. An estimated 195 children die Management of Acute Malnutrition into the local health
2013, respectively. Growth of revenue collections by the import mapping, fuel marking alongside the conduct of per day in the Philippines, and 35% of those deaths are system. The approach in Davao to identifying children at risk
Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) was particularly robust, audit on oil companies, trade statistics reconciliation, and malnutrition related. The Philippines ranks 9th in the world of SAM, and using community based interventions such
owing mostly to better implementation of administrative the requirement to submit a rolling import plan from all for stunting and 10th for wasting. Nearly 5 million children as supplementary feeding, is now considered by health
measures, including the Run After Tax Evaders (RATE) importers of sensitive commodities. suffer from malnutrition in the Philippines including an workers as a more effective approach than the previous
program. Collection effort of BIR recorded 9.3 per cent estimated 300,000 cases of Severe Acute Malnutrition DOH nation-wide approach that had tended to focus just
in 2009 and registered a decline to 9.1 per cent in 2010. Other policy and legislative initiatives that will be pursued (SAM: see abbreviations and glossary for definition). on weighing infants and children. Identifying children with
BIR collection effort, however, picked up to 9.5 per cent to support the expansion of fiscal space and to get on Over 2000 children have SAM in Davao, a city of over SAM, and the underlying causes on the demand and supply
in 2011, 10.0 per cent in 2012, and 10.5 in 2013. Growth a sustainable revenue-and-spending path for the fiscal 1.5 million with 182 barangays, in Mindanao. Community side of health care, was now starting to open a broader
in the BIR collection was relative to favourable economic sector include (a) Customs Modernization and Tariff Act Management of Acute Malnutrition (CMAM) and ready to policy discussion about upstream prevention of SAM.
conditions and administrative and legislative reforms, (CMTA); (b) rationalization of the mining fiscal regime; and use therapeutic foods are also evidence based approaches
particularly the implementation of Republic Act (RA) 10351 (c) transparency and accountability in the administration that, properly implemented, allow SAM children to be The EBaP principles are starting to be applied in
or the Sin Tax Reform Law of 2012. and rationalization of fiscal incentives. treated effectively at home rather than families having other contexts circumstances. The process of looking
to incur the cash and time expense of accessing health systematically at the demand side, as well as the supply
Non-tax revenue collection was also recorded at 1.8 per centres and / or ultimately requiring intensive care side of health care, and using local evidence to identify
cent of gross domestic product (GDP) in 2009 and slowed hospitalisation due to delayed treatment (86). the most critical gaps, is being applied in other contexts.
down to 1.3 per cent in 2010, and reached 1.6 per cent for Early examples include using EBaP principles to disaster
the years 2011, 2012 and 2013. The UNICEF supported Evidence Based Planning and preparedness and resilience planning: a contrast to a
Budgeting (EBaP) approach has been instrumental in simplistic “shopping list” approach whereby a Mayor had
The overall strategy in the fiscal sector is to increase the mobilising additional – and better targeted – resources recently asked UNICEF to fund a fire truck as that LGUs
revenue effort to 17.1 per cent of GDP by 2016. This is to address acute malnutrition at a city-wide level in approach to disaster preparedness. EBaP was about to be
to be achieved through an annual rise in tax revenues to Davao. The Mayor of Davao and his city government applied in Davos city to HIV and AIDS programs.
reach 16.1 per cent of GDP at the end of the Plan period in already had a commitment to public health (see the case
2016. Correspondingly, non-tax revenue collection is set to study on banning tobacco). They also state they have
increase to about 1.0 per cent of GDP. a commitment to the “least, last, and lost” and other
marginalised groups. The administration recognised that
malnutrition was a particular challenge. UNICEF selected
Davao as one of its 3 partner cities32 to address SAM in
Davao, using EBaP approaches. While too early to see
impact and outcomes, the EBaP approach was critical
to achieving much better input and process indicators.
More specifically the 2013 City budget for health was P 6
million, of which P 5 million was allocated to personnel
costs, leaving just P 1 million for programs. However
largely as a result of presentations of EBaP findings, the
operations budget for addressing malnutrition increased
by P 5.5 million, around half of the total increase
allocated to the City health budget.

In Quezon City UNICEF the EBaP approach focuses more on informal settlers, and in Puerto Princesa the EBaP focuses
32

more on reproductive, maternal, newborn and child health services.

58 PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT PHILIPPINES POLITICAL ECONOMY ASSESSMENT REPORT 59
United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF)
Three United Nations Plaza
New York, NY 10017 USA

www.unicef.org

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